4.7 Article

Periodic temporal environmental variations induce coexistence in resource competition models

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PHYSICAL REVIEW E
卷 108, 期 3, 页码 -

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AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.108.034404

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This article investigates how periodic temporal environmental variation can affect the composition and biodiversity of an ecosystem. By using a population dynamics model and timescale separation, the study shows that the impact of environmental changes on species coexistence and stability depends on the timescale of the changes.
Natural ecosystems, in particular on the microbial scale, are inhabited by a large number of species. The population size of each species is affected by interactions of individuals with each other and by spatial and temporal changes in environmental conditions, such as resource abundance. Here, we use a generic population dynamics model to study how, and under what conditions, a periodic temporal environmental variation can alter an ecosystem's composition and biodiversity. We demonstrate that using timescale separation allows one to qualitatively predict the long-term population dynamics of interacting species in varying environments. We show that the notion of Tilman's R* rule, a well-known principle that applies for constant environments, can be extended to periodically varying environments if the timescale of environmental changes (e.g., seasonal variations) is much faster than the timescale of population growth (doubling time in bacteria). When these timescales are similar, our analysis shows that a varying environment deters the system from reaching a steady state, and stable coexistence between multiple species becomes possible. Our results posit that biodiversity can in part be attributed to natural environmental variations.

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