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  4. Inferring species interactions in ecological communities: a comparison of methods at different levels of complexity
 
research article

Inferring species interactions in ecological communities: a comparison of methods at different levels of complexity

Carrara, Francesco  
•
Giometto, Andrea  
•
Seymour, Mathew
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2015
Methods In Ecology And Evolution
  1. Natural communities commonly contain many different species and functional groups, and multiple types of species interactions act simultaneously, such as competition, predation, commensalism or mutualism. However, experimental and theoretical investigations have generally been limited by focusing on one type of interaction at a time or by a lack of a common methodological and conceptual approach to measure species interactions. 2. We compared four methods to measure and express species interactions. These approaches are, with increasing degree of model complexity, an extinction-based model, a relative yield model and two generalized Lotka-Volterra (LV) models. All four approaches have been individually applied in different fields of community ecology, but rarely integrated. We provide an overview of the definitions, assumptions and data needed for the specific methods and apply them to empirical data by experimentally deriving the interaction matrices among 11 protist and rotifer species, belonging to three functional groups. Furthermore, we compare their advantages and limitations to predict multispecies community dynamics and ecosystem functioning. 3. The relative yield method is, in terms of final biomass production, the best method in predicting the 11-species community dynamics from the pairwise competition experiments. The LV model, which is considering equilibrium among the species, suffers from experimental constraints given the strict equilibrium assumption, and this may be rarely satisfied in ecological communities. 4. We show how simulations of a LV stochastic community model, derived from an empirical interaction matrix, can be used to predict multispecies community dynamics across multiple functional groups. 5.Our work unites available tools to measure species interactions under one framework. This improves our ability to make management-oriented predictions of species coexistence/extinction and to compare ecosystem processes across study systems.
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1111/2041-210X.12363
Web of Science ID

WOS:000359784100004

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

2015

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Published in
Methods In Ecology And Evolution
Volume

6

Issue

8

Start page

895

End page

906

Subjects

asymptotic stability

•

community dynamics

•

demographic stochasticity

•

ecological network

•

equilibrium

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experimental uncertainties

•

functional groups

•

interaction strength

•

interaction matrix

•

non-additive effects

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
ECHO  
Available on Infoscience
September 28, 2015
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/118835
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