4.8 Article

Resource availability and heterogeneity shape the self-organisation of regular spatial patterning

Journal

ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 24, Issue 9, Pages 1880-1891

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ele.13822

Keywords

coupled human-natural systems; ecosystem engineers; emergent properties; rangeland management; self-organised spatial patterning; semi-arid African savannas; spatial heterogeneity; termite mounds; territorial interference competition

Categories

Funding

  1. Princeton Environmental Institute, Princeton University
  2. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation [7800]
  3. Division of Mathematical Sciences [2052616]
  4. Division of Environmental Biology [DEB-1353781, DEB-1355122]
  5. Division Of Mathematical Sciences
  6. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [2052616] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Studying the impact of competition and spatial heterogeneity on the regularity of colony dispersion in fungus-farming termites, the research shows that highly ordered patterns emerge under high competition, abundant resources, and low resource heterogeneity. This analysis provides new insights into the mechanisms that modulate pattern regularity and the effects of these patterns on system-wide productivity. The results demonstrate how environmental context shapes pattern formation by social-insect ecosystem engineers, offering an explanation for the variability observed across ecosystems.
Explaining large-scale ordered patterns and their effects on ecosystem functioning is a fundamental and controversial challenge in ecology. Here, we coupled empirical and theoretical approaches to explore how competition and spatial heterogeneity govern the regularity of colony dispersion in fungus-farming termites. Individuals from different colonies fought fiercely, and inter-nest distances were greater when nests were large and resources scarce-as expected if competition is strong, large colonies require more resources and foraging area scales with resource availability. Building these principles into a model of inter-colony competition showed that highly ordered patterns emerged under high resource availability and low resource heterogeneity. Analysis of this dynamical model provided novel insights into the mechanisms that modulate pattern regularity and the emergent effects of these patterns on system-wide productivity. Our results show how environmental context shapes pattern formation by social-insect ecosystem engineers, which offers one explanation for the marked variability observed across ecosystems.

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