All ecosystems are subjected to chronic disturbances, such as harvest, pollution, and climate change. The capacity to forecast how species respond to such press perturbations is limited by our imprecise knowledge of pairwise species interaction strengths and the many direct and indirect pathways along which perturbations can propagate between species. Network complexity (size and connectance) has thereby been seen to limit the predictability of ecological systems. Here we demonstrate a counteracting mechanism in which the influence of indirect effects declines with increasing network complexity when species interactions are governed by universal allometric constraints. With these constraints, network size and connectance interact to produce...
A pressing challenge for ecologists is predicting how human-driven environmental changes will affect...
International audienceResponses of ecosystems to modifications of their environmental conditions are...
Using a bioenergetic model we show that the pattern of foraging preferences greatly determines the c...
All ecosystems are subjected to chronic disturbances, such as harvest, pollution, and climate change...
This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the University of Chicago...
Darwin's classic image of an "entangled bank'' of interdependencies among species has long sugg...
While the relationship between food web complexity and stability has been well documented, how compl...
Complexity science has come into the limelight in recent years as the scientific community begins to...
Understanding the mechanisms responsible for stability and persistence of ecosystems is one of the g...
International audienceUnderstanding the mechanisms responsible for stability and persistence of ecos...
Ecological communities – groups of interacting species – are subject to a variety of disturbances. U...
The potential for forecasting the dynamics of ecological systems is currently unclear, with contrast...
Trophic interaction modifications, where a consumer‐resource link is affected by additional species,...
Trophic interaction modifications are an important, but historically neglected, set of relationships...
Food-web structure and complexity can mediate effects of species loss such as cascading extinctions....
A pressing challenge for ecologists is predicting how human-driven environmental changes will affect...
International audienceResponses of ecosystems to modifications of their environmental conditions are...
Using a bioenergetic model we show that the pattern of foraging preferences greatly determines the c...
All ecosystems are subjected to chronic disturbances, such as harvest, pollution, and climate change...
This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the University of Chicago...
Darwin's classic image of an "entangled bank'' of interdependencies among species has long sugg...
While the relationship between food web complexity and stability has been well documented, how compl...
Complexity science has come into the limelight in recent years as the scientific community begins to...
Understanding the mechanisms responsible for stability and persistence of ecosystems is one of the g...
International audienceUnderstanding the mechanisms responsible for stability and persistence of ecos...
Ecological communities – groups of interacting species – are subject to a variety of disturbances. U...
The potential for forecasting the dynamics of ecological systems is currently unclear, with contrast...
Trophic interaction modifications, where a consumer‐resource link is affected by additional species,...
Trophic interaction modifications are an important, but historically neglected, set of relationships...
Food-web structure and complexity can mediate effects of species loss such as cascading extinctions....
A pressing challenge for ecologists is predicting how human-driven environmental changes will affect...
International audienceResponses of ecosystems to modifications of their environmental conditions are...
Using a bioenergetic model we show that the pattern of foraging preferences greatly determines the c...