Five fundamental ways in which complex food webs may spiral out of control

IF 7.6 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY Ecology Letters Pub Date : 2023-08-16 DOI:10.1111/ele.14293
J. Jelle Lever, Egbert H. Van Nes, Marten Scheffer, Jordi Bascompte
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Abstract

Theory suggests that increasingly long, negative feedback loops of many interacting species may destabilize food webs as complexity increases. Less attention has, however, been paid to the specific ways in which these ‘delayed negative feedbacks’ may affect the response of complex ecosystems to global environmental change. Here, we describe five fundamental ways in which these feedbacks might pave the way for abrupt, large-scale transitions and species losses. By combining topological and bioenergetic models, we then proceed by showing that the likelihood of such transitions increases with the number of interacting species and/or when the combined effects of stabilizing network patterns approach the minimum required for stable coexistence. Our findings thus shift the question from the classical question of what makes complex, unaltered ecosystems stable to whether the effects of, known and unknown, stabilizing food-web patterns are sufficient to prevent abrupt, large-scale transitions under global environmental change.

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复杂食物网可能失控的五种基本方式。
理论表明,随着复杂性的增加,许多相互作用物种越来越长的负反馈回路可能会破坏食物网的稳定。然而,人们对这些“延迟负反馈”可能影响复杂生态系统对全球环境变化的反应的具体方式关注较少。在这里,我们描述了这些反馈可能为突然、大规模的转变和物种损失铺平道路的五种基本方式。通过将拓扑模型和生物能量模型相结合,我们进一步表明,这种转变的可能性随着相互作用物种的数量和/或当稳定网络模式的组合效应接近稳定共存所需的最小值时而增加。因此,我们的研究结果将问题从是什么使复杂、不变的生态系统稳定的经典问题转移到了稳定食物网模式的影响(已知和未知)是否足以防止全球环境变化下的突然、大规模转变。
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来源期刊
Ecology Letters
Ecology Letters 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
17.60
自引率
3.40%
发文量
201
审稿时长
1.8 months
期刊介绍: Ecology Letters serves as a platform for the rapid publication of innovative research in ecology. It considers manuscripts across all taxa, biomes, and geographic regions, prioritizing papers that investigate clearly stated hypotheses. The journal publishes concise papers of high originality and general interest, contributing to new developments in ecology. Purely descriptive papers and those that only confirm or extend previous results are discouraged.
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