Stability of ecosystems enhanced by species-interaction constraints
Journal article, 2020

Ecosystem stability is a central question both in theoretical and applied biology. Dynamical systems theory can be used to analyze how growth rates, carrying capacities, and patterns of species interactions affect the stability of an ecosystem. The response to increasing complexity has been extensively studied and the general conclusion is that there is a limit. While there is a complexity limit to stability at which global destabilisation occurs, the collapse rarely happens suddenly if a system is fully viable (no species is extinct). In fact, when complexity is successively increased, we find that the generic response is to go through multiple single-species extinctions before a global collapse. In this paper we demonstrate this finding via both numerical simulations and elaborations of theoretical predictions. We explore more biological interaction patterns, and, perhaps most importantly, we show that constrained interaction structures-a constant row sum in the interaction matrix-prevent extinctions from occurring. This makes an ecosystem more robust in terms of allowed complexity, but it also means singles-species extinctions do not precede or signal collapse-a drastically different behavior compared to the generic and commonly assumed case. We further argue that this constrained interaction structure-limiting the total interactions for each species-is biologically plausible.

Author

Susanne Pettersson

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

Van M. Savage

University of California at Los Angeles

Martin Nilsson Jacobi

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

Physical Review E

2470-0045 (ISSN) 2470-0053 (eISSN)

Vol. 102 6 062405

Subject Categories

Ecology

Other Physics Topics

Biophysics

DOI

10.1103/PhysRevE.102.062405

More information

Latest update

7/19/2023