Generic assembly patterns in complex ecological communities
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Edited by Alan Hastings, University of California, Davis, CA, and approved January 26, 2018 (received for review June 7, 2017)

Significance
Biodiversity may lead to the emergence of simple and robust relationships between ecosystem properties. Here we show that a wide range of models of species dynamics, in the limit of high diversity, exhibit generic behavior predictable from a few emergent parameters, which control ecosystem functioning and stability. Our work points toward ways to tackle the staggering complexity of ecological systems without relying on empirically unavailable details of their structure.
Abstract
The study of ecological communities often involves detailed simulations of complex networks. However, our empirical knowledge of these networks is typically incomplete and the space of simulation models and parameters is vast, leaving room for uncertainty in theoretical predictions. Here we show that a large fraction of this space of possibilities exhibits generic behaviors that are robust to modeling choices. We consider a wide array of model features, including interaction types and community structures, known to generate different dynamics for a few species. We combine these features in large simulated communities, and show that equilibrium diversity, functioning, and stability can be predicted analytically using a random model parameterized by a few statistical properties of the community. We give an ecological interpretation of this “disordered” limit where structure fails to emerge from complexity. We also demonstrate that some well-studied interaction patterns remain relevant in large ecosystems, but their impact can be encapsulated in a minimal number of additional parameters. Our approach provides a powerful framework for predicting the outcomes of ecosystem assembly and quantifying the added value of more detailed models and measurements.
Footnotes
- ↵1To whom correspondence should be addressed. Email: contact{at}mrcbarbier.org.
Author contributions: M.B., J.-F.A., G.B., and M.L. designed research; M.B. and J.-F.A. performed research; M.B. analyzed data; and M.B. and J.-F.A. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1710352115/-/DCSupplemental.
Published under the PNAS license.
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- Biological Sciences
- Ecology