4.4 Article

Coupled phase-amplitude dynamics in heterogeneous metacommunities

Journal

JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 523, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2021.110676

Keywords

Synchrony; Dispersal; Habitat heterogeneity; Entrainment; Variability

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN-2017-04266, RGPAS-2017-507832]

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Spatial synchrony of population fluctuations is important for predicting regional stability, but its application to natural systems is limited by the complexity of ecological time series. Environmental fluctuations and limited dispersal play a role in controlling the dynamics of population fluctuations, but their impact on synchrony and stability in metacommunities needs further investigation. This study found that frequency modulation occurs at intermediate values of dispersal and habitat heterogeneity, promoting local and regional stability through cyclic patterns of local and regional variability.
Spatial synchrony of population fluctuations is an important tool for predicting regional stability. Its application to natural systems is still limited by the complexity of ecological time series displaying great variation in the frequency and amplitude of their fluctuations, which are not fully resolved by current ecological theories of spatial synchrony. In particular, while environmental fluctuations and limited dispersal can each control the dynamics of frequency and amplitude of population fluctuations, ecological theories of spatial synchrony still need to resolve their role on synchrony and stability in heterogeneous metacommunities. Here, we adopt a heterogeneous predator-prey metacommunity model and study the response of dispersal-driven phase locking and frequency modulation to among-patch heterogeneity in carrying capacity. We find that frequency modulation occurs at intermediate values of dispersal and habitat heterogeneity. We also show how frequency modulation can emerge in metacommunities of autonomously oscillating populations as well as through the forcing of local communities at equilibrium. Frequency modulation was further found to produce temporal variation in population amplitudes, promoting local and regional stability through cyclic patterns of local and regional variability. Our results highlight the importance of approaching spatial synchrony as a non-stationary phenomenon, with implications for the assessment and interpretation of spatial synchrony observed in experimental and natural systems. (C) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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