Food-web complexity emerging from ecological dynamics on adaptive networks
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Publication date
2007ISSN
0022-5193
Abstract
Food webs are complex networks describing trophic interactions in ecological communities. Since Robert May’s seminal work on
random structured food webs, the complexity–stability debate is a central issue in ecology: does network complexity increase or decrease
food-web persistence? A multi-species predator–prey model incorporating adaptive predation shows that the action of ecological
dynamics on the topology of a food web (whose initial configuration is generated either by the cascade model or by the niche model)
render, when a significant fraction of adaptive predators is present, similar hyperbolic complexity–persistence relationships as those
observed in empirical food webs. It is also shown that the apparent positive relation between complexity and persistence in food webs
generated under the cascade model, which has been pointed out in previous papers, disappears when the final connectance is used instead
of the initial one to explain species persistence.
Document Type
Article
Language
English
Keywords
Models matemàtics
Xarxes (Matemàtica)
Pages
8 p.
Publisher
Elsevier
Citation
Garcia Domingo, Josep Lluis, and Joan Saldaña Meca. "Food-Web Complexity Emerging from Ecological Dynamics on Adaptive Networks." Journal of theoretical biology 247.4 (2007): 819-26.
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(c) 2007 Elsevier. Published article is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jtbi.2007.04.011