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research article

Experimental evidence for strong stabilizing forces at high functional diversity of aquatic microbial communities

Carrara, Francesco  
•
Giometto, Andrea  
•
Seymour, Mathew
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2015
Ecology

Unveiling the mechanisms that promote coexistence in biological communities is a fundamental problem in ecology. Stable coexistence of many species is commonly observed in natural communities. Most of these natural communities, however, are composed of species from multiple trophic and functional groups, while theory and experiments on coexistence have been focusing on functionally similar species. Here, we investigated how functional diversity affects the stability of species coexistence and productivity in multispecies communities by characterizing experimentally all pairwise species interactions in a pool of 11 species of eukaryotes (10 protists and one rotifer) belonging to three different functional groups. Species within the same functional group showed stronger competitive interactions compared to among-functional group interactions. This often led to competitive exclusion between species that had higher functional relatedness, but only at low levels of species richness. Communities with higher functional diversity resulted in increased species coexistence and community biomass production. Our experimental findings and the results of a stochastic model tailored to the experimental interaction matrix suggest the emergence of strong stabilizing forces when species from different functional groups interact in a homogeneous environment. By combining theoretical analysis with experiments we could also disentangle the relationship between species richness and functional diversity, showing that functional diversity per se is a crucial driver of productivity and stability in multispecies community.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1890/14-1324.1.sm
Web of Science ID

WOS:000354119300018

Author(s)
Carrara, Francesco  
Giometto, Andrea  
Seymour, Mathew
Rinaldo, Andrea  
Altermatt, Florian
Date Issued

2015

Publisher

Ecological Soc Amer

Published in
Ecology
Volume

96

Issue

5

Start page

1340

End page

1350

Subjects

biodiversity-ecosystem functioning

•

community assembly

•

community dynamics

•

ecological networks

•

functional diversity

•

interaction experiment

•

interaction matrix

•

interaction strength

•

protist microcosm

•

protists

•

stability

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
ECHO  
Available on Infoscience
May 29, 2015
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/114183
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