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Climate Change
environmental stochasticity
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Trophic interactions affect the population dynamics and risk of extinction of basal species in food webs
Trophic interactions affect the population dynamics and risk of extinction of basal species in food webs,10.1016/j.ecocom.2009.05.013,Ecological Compl
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Trophic interactions affect the population dynamics and risk of extinction of basal species in food webs
(
Citations: 1
)
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Tomas Jonsson
,
Patrik Karlsson
,
Annie Jonsson
This paper addresses effects of trophic complexity on basal species, in a Lotka–Volterra model with stochasticity. We use simple
food web
modules, with three trophic levels, and expose every species to random
environmental stochasticity
and analyze (1) the effect of the position of strong trophic interactions on temporal fluctuations in basal species’ abundances and (2) the relationship between fluctuation patterns and extinction risk. First, the numerical simulations showed that basal species do not simply track the environment, i.e. species dynamics do not simply mirror the characteristics of the applied environmental stochasticity. Second, the
extinction risk
of species was related to the fluctuation patterns of the species.More specifically, we show (i) that despite being forced by random stochasticity without temporal autocorrelation (i.e. white noise), there is significant temporal autocorrelation in the
time series
of all basal species’ abundances (i.e. the spectra of basal species are red-shifted), (ii) the degree of temporal autocorrelation in basal species
time series
is affected by
food web structure
and (iii) the degree of temporal autocorrelation tend to be correlated to the extinction risks of basal species.Our results emphasize the role of
food web structure
and species interactions in modifying the response of species to environmental variability. To shed some light on the mechanisms we compare the observed pattern in abundances of basal species with analytically predicted patterns and show that the change in the predicted pattern due to the addition of strong trophic interactions is correlated to the
extinction risk
of the basal species. We conclude that much remain to be understood about the mechanisms behind the interaction among environmental variability, species interactions, population dynamics and vulnerability before we quantitatively can predict, for example, effects of
climate change
on species and ecological communities. Here, however, we point out a new possible approach for identifying species that are vulnerable to
environmental stochasticity
by checking the degree of temporal autocorrelation in the
time series
of species. Increased autocorrelation in population fluctuations can be an indication of increased extinction risk.
Journal:
Ecological Complexity - ECOL COMPLEX
, vol. 7, no. 1, pp. 60-68, 2010
DOI:
10.1016/j.ecocom.2009.05.013
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Shielding effectiveness of reinforced concrete structures in cellular communication bands
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Citations: 1
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H. M. Elkamchouchi
,
A. T. Abdelkader
Conference:
Radio Science National Conference - NSRC
, 2002