Species exhibit various trade-offs that can result in stable coexistence of competitors. The gleaner–opportunist trade-off to fluctuations in resource abundance is one of the most intuitive, yet also misunderstood, coexistence-promoting trade-offs. Here, we review its history as an ecological concept, discuss extensions to the classical theory and outline opportunities to advance its understanding. The mechanism of coexistence between species that grow relatively faster than their competitors in a low-resource environment (i.e. a gleaner) versus a high-resource environment (i.e. an opportunist) was first proposed in the 1970s. Stable coexistence could emerge between gleaners and opportunists if the opportunist species (dominant in unstable ...
A mathematical model is presented that describes a system where two consumer species compete exploit...
The theory of species coexistence is a key concept in ecology that has received much attention. The ...
The ecological principle of competitive exclusion states that species competing for identical resour...
Recent studies have demonstrated that rapid contemporary evolution can play a significant role in re...
A great deal is known about the influence of dispersal on species that interact via competition or p...
If two species exhibit different nonlinear responses to a single shared resource, and if each specie...
If two species exhibit different nonlinear responses to a single shared resource, and if each specie...
Investigating the mechanisms by which species persist within complex ecological communities and in v...
We study the adaptive dynamics of the colonization rate of species living in a patchy habitat when t...
Competition can result in evolutionary changes to coexistence between competitors but there are no t...
Community ecology typically assumes that competitive exclusion and species coexistence are unaffecte...
We use simple mathematical models to explore the indirect interactions between two prey species that...
Coexistence of plants depends on their competition for common resources and indirect interactions me...
The theory for species coexistence in metacommunities largely ignores small-scale, station-keeping m...
*Background/Question/Methods*

Recruitment variation is believed to be an importan...
A mathematical model is presented that describes a system where two consumer species compete exploit...
The theory of species coexistence is a key concept in ecology that has received much attention. The ...
The ecological principle of competitive exclusion states that species competing for identical resour...
Recent studies have demonstrated that rapid contemporary evolution can play a significant role in re...
A great deal is known about the influence of dispersal on species that interact via competition or p...
If two species exhibit different nonlinear responses to a single shared resource, and if each specie...
If two species exhibit different nonlinear responses to a single shared resource, and if each specie...
Investigating the mechanisms by which species persist within complex ecological communities and in v...
We study the adaptive dynamics of the colonization rate of species living in a patchy habitat when t...
Competition can result in evolutionary changes to coexistence between competitors but there are no t...
Community ecology typically assumes that competitive exclusion and species coexistence are unaffecte...
We use simple mathematical models to explore the indirect interactions between two prey species that...
Coexistence of plants depends on their competition for common resources and indirect interactions me...
The theory for species coexistence in metacommunities largely ignores small-scale, station-keeping m...
*Background/Question/Methods*

Recruitment variation is believed to be an importan...
A mathematical model is presented that describes a system where two consumer species compete exploit...
The theory of species coexistence is a key concept in ecology that has received much attention. The ...
The ecological principle of competitive exclusion states that species competing for identical resour...