4.8 Review

Evolutionarily stable communities: a framework for understanding the role of trait evolution in the maintenance of diversity

Journal

ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 21, Issue 12, Pages 1853-1868

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ele.13142

Keywords

Adaptive dynamics; adaptive landscape; character displacement; coexistence; eco-evolutionary dynamics; ecological equivalence; ESS

Categories

Funding

  1. NSF [DEB-0845825, DEB-0845932, OCE-0928819, DEB-1136710, OCE-1559356]
  2. Simons Foundation Early Career Investigator Award
  3. PRFB [1402074]
  4. Simons Foundation MMLS

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Biological diversity depends on the interplay between evolutionary diversification and ecological mechanisms allowing species to coexist. Current research increasingly integrates ecology and evolution over a range of timescales, but our common conceptual framework for understanding species coexistence requires better incorporation of evolutionary processes. Here, we focus on the idea of evolutionarily stable communities (ESCs), which are theoretical endpoints of evolution in a community context. We use ESCs as a unifying framework to highlight some important but under-appreciated theoretical results, and we review empirical research relevant to these theoretical predictions. We explain how, in addition to generating diversity, evolution can also limit diversity by reducing the effectiveness of coexistence mechanisms. The coevolving traits of competing species may either diverge or converge, depending on whether the number of species in the community is low (undersaturated) or high (oversaturated) relative to the ESC. Competition in oversaturated communities can lead to extinction or neutrally coexisting, ecologically equivalent species. It is critical to consider trait evolution when investigating fundamental ecological questions like the strength of different coexistence mechanisms, the feasibility of ecologically equivalent species, and the interpretation of different patterns of trait dispersion.

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