4.4 Article

Synchrony and Stability of Food Webs in Metacommunities

Journal

AMERICAN NATURALIST
Volume 175, Issue 2, Pages E16-E34

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/649579

Keywords

food web; stability; metacommunity; synchrony; environmental variability; compensatory dynamics

Funding

  1. McGill Majors fellowship
  2. James S. McDonnell Foundation
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  4. Canada Research Chair Program
  5. Fonds Quebecois de la Recherche sur la Nature et les Technologies

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Synchrony has fundamental but conflicting implications for the persistence and stability of food webs at local and regional scales. In a constant environment, compensatory dynamics between species can maintain food web stability, but factors that synchronize population fluctuations within and between communities are expected to be destabilizing. We studied the dynamics of a food web in a metacommunity to determine how environmental variability and dispersal affect stability by altering compensatory dynamics and average species abundance. When dispersal rate is high, weak correlated environmental fluctuations promote food web stability by reducing the amplitude of compensatory dynamics. However, when dispersal rate is low, weak environmental fluctuations reduce food web stability by inducing intraspecific synchrony across communities. Irrespective of dispersal rate, strong environmental fluctuations disrupt compensatory dynamics and decrease stability by inducing intermittent correlated fluctuations between consumers in local food webs, which reduce both total consumer abundance and predator abundance. Strong correlated environmental fluctuations lead to (i) spatially asynchronous and highly correlated local consumer dynamics when dispersal is low and (ii) spatially synchronous but intermediate local consumer correlation when dispersal is high. By controlling intraspecific synchrony, dispersal mediates the capacity of strong environmental fluctuations to disrupt compensatory dynamics at both local and metacommunity scales.

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