4.7 Article

Resistance and resilience to invasion is stronger in synchronous than compensatory communities

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.4162

Keywords

biodiversity; competitive dynamics; constancy; environmental fluctuations; invasion ecology; resilience; resistance; stability; synchrony

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This study used a mathematical model to investigate the relationship between community synchrony and ecological invasions. The findings suggest that synchronous communities are more resistant and resilient to invasion, and emphasize the importance of protecting compensatory and weakly synchronous communities.
While community synchrony is a key framework for predicting ecological constancy, the interplay between community synchrony and ecological invasions remains unclear. Yet the degree of synchrony in a resident community may influence its resistance and resilience to the introduction of an invasive species. Here we used a generalizable mathematical framework, constructed with a modified Lotka-Volterra competition model, to first simulate resident communities across a range of competitive strengths and species' responses to environmental fluctuations, which yielded communities that ranged from strongly synchronous to compensatory. We then invaded these communities at different timesteps with invaders of varying demographic traits, after which we quantified the resident community's susceptibility to initial invasion attempts (resistance) and the degree to which community synchrony was altered after invasion (resiliency of synchrony). We found that synchronous communities were not only more resistant but also more resilient to invasion than compensatory communities, likely due to stronger competition between resident species and thus lower cumulative abundances in compensatory communities, providing greater opportunities for invasion. The growth rate of the invader was most influenced by the resident and invader competition coefficients and the growth rate of the invader species. Our findings support prioritizing the conservation of compensatory and weakly synchronous communities which may be at increased risk of invasion.

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