Speciation in a MacArthur model predicts growth, stability and adaptation in ecosystems dynamics
Elena Bellavere, Christian H. S. Hamster, Joshua A. Dijksman
Unverified — Be the first to reproduce this paper.
ReproduceAbstract
Ecosystems dynamics is often considered as driven by a coupling of species' resource consumption and its population size dynamics. Such resource-population dynamics is captured by MacArthur-type models. One biologically relevant feature that would also need to be captured by such models is the introduction of new and different species. Speciation introduces a stochastic component in the otherwise deterministic MacArthur theory. We describe here how speciation can be implemented to yield a model that is consistent with current theory on equilibrium resource-consumer models, but also displays readily observable rank diversity metric changes. The model also reproduces a priority effect. Adding speciation to a MacArthur-style model so provides an attractively simple extension to explore the rich dynamics in evolving ecosystems.