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Journal ArticleDOI

Asymmetrical competition in insects

John H. Lawton, +1 more
- 26 Feb 1981 - 
- Vol. 289, Iss: 5800, pp 793-795
TLDR
Here it is shown that for insects in natural conditions, strongly asymmetrical competition (amensalism or near amensalistism) is the norm rather than the exception by a ratio of at least 2:1.
Abstract
It is widely believed that when populations of two species of animals compete, each has an adverse effect on the other1,2. In other words, each zero growth isocline (dNi/dt = 0 where Ni is the population density of species i) is assumed to be some negative function of the population density of the other species. Cases where one species has a marked effect on the other, but there is no detectable reciprocal effect are sometimes distinguished as ‘amensalism’2,3. This is regarded as unusual. Standard textbooks of ecology either do not mention it1,4–6, define it but do not discuss it2, or occasionally give a brief account3. Ricklefs7 states that “competition can manifest itself by reducing the numbers of one or both competing species” without saying which is the more usual. Here we show that for insects in natural conditions, strongly asymmetrical competition (amensalism or near amensalism) is the norm rather than the exception by a ratio of at least 2:1.

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Citations
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Organisms as ecosystem engineers

TL;DR: The role that many organisms play in the creation, modification and maintenance of habitats does not involve direct trophic interactions between species, but they are nevertheless important and common.
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On the prevalence and relative importance of interspecific competition: evidence from field experiments

TL;DR: The present survey illustrates how difficult it is to produce a clear and unambiguous demonstration of interspecific competition.
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Patterns of mutualistic interactions in pollination and seed dispersal: connectance, dependence asymmetries, and coevolution

TL;DR: Patterns of connectance and strength of mutual dependence in mutualisms have been examined by comparing the fraction of possible pairwise interactions established in a series of plant-pollinator and plant-seed disperser systems and suggest a mode by which diffuse coevolution can proceed.
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Habitat Selection and Population Interactions: The Search for Mechanism

TL;DR: The development of the topic is outlined in the context of two questions, both of which take it as an assumption that habitat selection is an optimal-foraging process: How does habitat selection alter (or reinforce) the dynamics of population interactions?
References
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Book

Fundamentals of ecology

TL;DR: This book discusses the role of energy in Ecological Systems, its role in ecosystem development, and its implications for future generations of ecologists.
Book

Ecology: The Experimental Analysis of Distribution and Abundance

TL;DR: This book discusses ecosystem dynamics under Changing Climates, which includes community dynamics at the community level, and factors that limit Distributions, which limit the amount of variation in population size.
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Communities and Ecosystems

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Fundamentals of Ecology

TL;DR: Odum and Barrett as mentioned in this paper discuss the scope of ecology and its role in the development of communities and landscapes, and provide an overview of the major ecosystems types and biomes.