Environment-Organism Feedbacks Drive Changes in Ecological Interactions

IF 7.6 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY Ecology Letters Pub Date : 2024-12-31 DOI:10.1111/ele.70027
Oliver J. Meacock, Sara Mitri
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Abstract

Ecological interactions are foundational to our understanding of community composition and function. While interactions are known to change depending on the environmental context, it has generally been assumed that external environmental factors are responsible for driving these dependencies. Here, we derive a theoretical framework which instead focuses on how intrinsic environmental changes caused by the organisms themselves alter interaction values. Our central concept is the ‘instantaneous interaction’, which captures the feedback between the current environmental state and organismal growth, generating spatiotemporal context-dependencies as organisms modify their environment over time and/or space. We use small microbial communities to illustrate how this framework can predict time-dependencies in a toxin degradation system, and relate time- and spatial-dependencies in crossfeeding communities. By re-centring the relationship between organisms and their environment, our framework predicts the variations in interactions wherever intrinsic, organism-driven environmental change dominates over external drivers.

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环境-生物反馈驱动生态相互作用的变化
生态相互作用是我们理解群落组成和功能的基础。虽然已知交互作用会根据环境上下文而变化,但通常假设外部环境因素负责驱动这些依赖关系。在这里,我们推导了一个理论框架,而不是关注有机体本身引起的内在环境变化如何改变相互作用值。我们的中心概念是“瞬时互动”,它捕捉到当前环境状态和生物体生长之间的反馈,当生物体随时间和/或空间改变其环境时,产生时空上下文依赖性。我们使用小型微生物群落来说明该框架如何预测毒素降解系统中的时间依赖性,并将交叉饲养群落中的时间和空间依赖性联系起来。通过重新定位生物与其环境之间的关系,我们的框架预测了内在的、生物驱动的环境变化在外部驱动因素中占主导地位的相互作用的变化。
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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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