Arid
DOI10.1371/journal.pone.0018039
Coexistence of Insect Species Competing for a Pulsed Resource: Toward a Unified Theory of Biodiversity in Fluctuating Environments
Venner, Samuel1,2,3; Pelisson, Pierre-Francois1,2,3; Bel-Venner, Marie-Claude1,2,3; Debias, Francois1,2,3; Rajon, Etienne4; Menu, Frederic1,2,3
通讯作者Venner, Samuel
来源期刊PLOS ONE
ISSN1932-6203
出版年2011
卷号6期号:3
英文摘要

Background: One major challenge in understanding how biodiversity is organized is finding out whether communities of competing species are shaped exclusively by species-level differences in ecological traits (niche theory), exclusively by random processes (neutral theory of biodiversity), or by both processes simultaneously. Communities of species competing for a pulsed resource are a suitable system for testing these theories: due to marked fluctuations in resource availability, the theories yield very different predictions about the timing of resource use and the synchronization of the population dynamics between the competing species. Accordingly, we explored mechanisms that might promote the local coexistence of phytophagous insects (four sister species of the genus Curculio) competing for oak acorns, a pulsed resource.


Methodology/Principal Findings: We analyzed the time partitioning of the exploitation of oak acorns by the four weevil species in two independent communities, and we assessed the level of synchronization in their population dynamics. In accordance with the niche theory, overall these species exhibited marked time partitioning of resource use, both within a given year and between different years owing to different dormancy strategies between species, as well as distinct demographic patterns. Two of the four weevil species, however, consistently exploited the resource during the same period of the year, exhibited a similar dormancy pattern, and did not show any significant difference in their population dynamics.


Conclusions/Significance: The marked time partitioning of the resource use appears as a keystone of the coexistence of these competing insect species, except for two of them which are demographically nearly equivalent. Communities of consumers of pulsed resources thus seem to offer a promising avenue for developing a unifying theory of biodiversity in fluctuating environments which might predict the co-occurrence, within the same community, of species that are ecologically either very similar, or very different.


类型Article
语种英语
国家France ; USA
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000288613300030
WOS关键词PROLONGED DIAPAUSE ; COMMUNITY DYNAMICS ; DESERT ANNUALS ; NEUTRALITY ; ECOLOGY ; NICHE ; DIVERSITY ; PERSPECTIVES ; MAINTENANCE ; MECHANISMS
WOS类目Multidisciplinary Sciences
WOS研究方向Science & Technology - Other Topics
来源机构University of Arizona
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/170073
作者单位1.Univ Lyon 1, F-69622 Villeurbanne, France;
2.Univ Lyon, Lyon, France;
3.CNRS, Lab Biometrie & Biol Evolut, UMR5558, Villeurbanne, France;
4.Univ Arizona, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Tucson, AZ USA
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Venner, Samuel,Pelisson, Pierre-Francois,Bel-Venner, Marie-Claude,et al. Coexistence of Insect Species Competing for a Pulsed Resource: Toward a Unified Theory of Biodiversity in Fluctuating Environments[J]. University of Arizona,2011,6(3).
APA Venner, Samuel,Pelisson, Pierre-Francois,Bel-Venner, Marie-Claude,Debias, Francois,Rajon, Etienne,&Menu, Frederic.(2011).Coexistence of Insect Species Competing for a Pulsed Resource: Toward a Unified Theory of Biodiversity in Fluctuating Environments.PLOS ONE,6(3).
MLA Venner, Samuel,et al."Coexistence of Insect Species Competing for a Pulsed Resource: Toward a Unified Theory of Biodiversity in Fluctuating Environments".PLOS ONE 6.3(2011).
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