Title: Neutral Theory
1Neutral Theory
- Hubbell, S.P. (2005) Neutral theory in community
ecology and the hypothesis of functional
equivalence. Functional Ecology 19 166-172.
2Hubbell asks
- how did niche differences evolve, how are they
maintained ecologically, and what niche
differences, if any, matter to the assembly of
ecological communities? -
- which species, having which niche traits, and
how many species, co-occur in a given community.
3How to answer these questions?
- Assume ecological communities are complex,
high-dimensional entities - Start from the simplest possible hypothesis one
can think of and add complexity from there - Ex the functional equivalence of species
- Question now becomes what is the minimum
necessary dimensionality of the theory required
to characterize a given ecological community to a
desired level of realism and precision?
4Functional equivalence
- trophically similar species are, at least to a
first approximation, demographically identical on
a per capita basis in terms of their vital
rates - Species in communities violate this assumption,
but how by how much? Is this a good first
approximation?
5Neutral theory and Occams Razor
- All things being equal, the simplest explanation
is the best one. - Is this true for ecological communities?
6Competition and the classical niche paradigm
- Gause (1934) and the competitive exclusion
principle no two species with identical niches
can coexist indefinately - Laboratory experiments with Paramecium modeled by
Lottka-Volterra equations - framed the discussion of coexistence and
community assembly in terms of competition
7Implications of Gauses work
- Limiting similarity between the niches of
coexisting similarity - Competitive exclusion should be observed in the
natural world - Otherwise, at least, we should observe character
displacement in resource use when similar species
DO co-occur - Hubbell notes that there are few examples of
character displacement or competitive exclusion
8Niche hypervolume
- Hutchinson (1957)
- Competition results in species occupying only
their realized niche, as opposed to their
fundamental niche - Hubbell wonders how, then, should we explain the
persistence of adaptations for parts of
fundamental niche space that are never occupied
9Competition and the classical niche paradigm
- Levins (1968) multispecies community matrix
theory - Tilman (1980s) mechanistic theory incorporating
the dynamics of resource supply and consumption
along with the dynamics of the resource-dependent
consumer species
10Competition and the classical niche paradigm
- Resource-based theory lead to realization of the
importance of physiological and life-history
trade-offs - However, if there was a strict transitive
trade-off between competitive ability (site
tenacity) and dispersal ability then, in
principle, any arbitrary number of species could
coexist.
11Competition and the classical niche paradigm
- Hurtt and Pacala (1995) relax strict trade-off
assumption, coexistence possible via strong
dispersal and recruitment limitation - If a dominant species is recruitment limited,
inferior species will be able to win some sites
by forfeit - Non-equilibrium co-existencei.e. Bastows
equalizing processes
12Competition and the classical niche paradigm
- Is there anything left out in this time-line of
the development of niche paradigm? - Do we agree with the conclusions and implications
of each authors work as described by Hubbell?
13The hypothesis of functional equivalenceThe
cornerstone of neutral theory
- Functional equivalence is assumed at the entire
community level(for all species?), a broader
view than the aggregation of similar species into
functional groups - Recognizing functional groups implies that niche
differences among these groups are believed to
matter to the assembly, stability and resilience
of communities to disturbance - Hubbell poses two questions regarding the
assembly of functional groups (his answers are in
parenthesis in italics) worth discussing - Does a limiting niche similarity for species in
functional groups exist? (no, at least in plants) - How many coexisting species can be packed into a
functional group? (arbitrary, again plants)
14Barro Colorado Island (BCI)
- 50 hectares, censused 5 times since 1980
- Old-growth tropical forest in Panama
- gt300 tree and shrub species, 230-240 thousand
stems (gt1 cm dbh)
- Figure 1 shows a dominating axis of niche
differentiation, light availability. - Concentration of species at the shade-tolerant
end, upper left can be interpreted as evidence
for a trade-off between survival under shade
stress and maximum growth rate in full sun. - Shade-tolerant species are more abundant, this
should make sense, its an old growth forest, but
thats not the point - This graph shows no distinct break that would
indicate 2 functional groups
(Hubbell Foster 1992, Hubbell 2005)
15Figure 1 discussion cont..
- Can classic niche theory explain this clustering
of species? - Can classic niche theory explain why niches are
more finely partitioned under low-light
conditions than under high-light conditions? - Hubbel has an alternate hypothesis species are
selected to exhibit the syndrome of traits that
adapt them for growth and survival under the
commonest environmental conditionscausing
species to converge on similar trait syndromes
termed functional convergence
16- So a functional convergence hypothesis would
claim that species with similar niche
requirements are sorted into similar habitats.. - Applied to the BCI example, the scarcity of
pioneer species (shade-intolerant) is a
reflection of the lack of gap habitat compared to
shady habitat, over evolutionary time - species richness of shade tolerant and gap
species is determined by the richness of the
regional species pool and the abundance of shady
and gap habitats in the metacommunity over long
periods of time
17- This life history convergence is expected to lead
to competitive exclusion and a loss of species,
yet this doesnt seem to be occurring in BCI
Hubbell cites two reason why this may be. - Combination of dispersal and recruitment
limitation - Only 12/260 species dispersed at least one seed
to ½ or gt of traps - Pervasive density dependence affecting seedling
germination - dispersal and recruitment limitation are
sufficiently strong to prevent competitive
exclusion among species sharing life history
traits for the most common environments of the
forest. - Heterogeneity of biotic and abiotic
microenvironments of individuals of each species. - in species-rich communities, the opportunities
for directional character displacement among a
large number of competing species would be low
(Hubbell Foster 1986b) - BCI species identity of focal plants neighbors
was not quantitatively important or statistically
significant, suggesting virtually every
individual has a differs in the direction of
selection imposed by interspecific competition