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Journal ArticleDOI

Ecological Systems in Hierarchical Perspecitive: Breaks in Community Structure and Other Consequences

Jerzy Kolasa
- 01 Feb 1989 - 
- Vol. 70, Iss: 1, pp 36-47
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TLDR
A hierarchical structure of the environment appears promising in accounting for some poorly explained community-level phenomena, such as correlation between the species range and abundance, and differences between abundance structures of communities in rigorous and less severe environments.
Abstract
Explanation of the patterns of species abundances is important because it may help in understanding mechanisms structuring communities. A general conceptual model is proposed and examined as an alternative to previous propositions, which focused too narrowly on specific mechanisms. According to this model, viewing the structure of an environment as a nested hierarchy of habitat units provides a general mechanism sufficient to account for empirically established regularities in species abundances. Various biotic and abiotic factors can be considered as specific mechanisms sorting biological components into respective levels and compartments of the hierarchical structure of the environment. Because "sizes" of these compartments vary in a predictable way as a function of their position in the hierarchy, so should the abundances. The model may provide a conceptual framework that allows evaluation of the relative contributions of competition, predation, and other biological interactions. The operational and highly simplified version of the model uses spatial or temporal measures of ecological ranges of species to facilitate testing of the general model. The operational model makes three qualitative and quanti- tative predictions: (1) although the species display a continuous gradation of properties, the nested hierarchy of habitat units should lead to clustering of species at distinct levels; (2) generalists should be relatively more successful than specialists; (3) relative abundances of species should be predictable from their position in the hierarchical structure. An analysis of eight communities, including flatworms, aquatic insects, foraminiferans, rodents, and birds, supports these predictions. The clusters, or "breaks" in community structure, appear to be a new and possibly general property. Moreover, quantitative predictions of relative abundances for these communities are in surprisingly good agreement with the actual abundances. A hierarchical structure of the environment appears promising in accounting for some poorly explained community-level phenomena, such as correlation between the species range and abundance, and differences between abundance structures of communities in rigorous and less severe environments. The model is compatible with commonly ob- served as well as irregular patterns of distribution of species abundances, with high local abundance of some species, with differentiation of extinction probabilities, and with scale dependence of ecological phenomena.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Multiple scales of patchiness and patch structure: a hierarchical framework for the study of heterogeneity

Natasha B. Kotliar, +1 more
- 01 Nov 1990 - 
TL;DR: A hierarchical model of heterogeneity that provides a framework for classifying patch structure across a range of scales and has wider applications as in the study of habitat selection, population dynamics, and habitat fragmentation is developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

From balance of nature to hierarchical patch dynamics: A paradigm shift in ecology

TL;DR: The more recent concepts of point equilibrium and static stability, which characterize the classical equilibrium paradigm in ecology, are traceable to the assumptions implicit in "balance of nature" as mentioned in this paper, which has failed not only because equilibrium conditions are rare in nature, but also because of our past inability to incorporate heterogeneity and scale multiplicity into our quantitative expressions for stability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interspecific abundance-range size relationships: An appraisal of mechanisms

TL;DR: All the principal mechanisms proposed to explain positive interspecific abundance-range size relationships are identified and clarified and critically assess the assumptions and predictions that they make, and the evidence in support of them.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Structure of Biological Science.

TL;DR: In this paper, the structure of evolutionary theory is discussed, as well as the problems of functionalism and reductionism, and the temptation of provincialism in evolutionary theory are discussed.
References
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Book

The Ecological Implications of Body Size

TL;DR: In this paper, a philosophical introduction is given to logarithms, power curves, and correlations, and a mathematical primer: logarsithm, power curve and correlations.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the Relationship between Abundance and Distribution of Species

TL;DR: The general relationships between abundance and distribution developed here eventually should contribute to the understanding of the biogeography, population genetics, and evolution of species as well as the ecological attributes of populations and communities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seasonal changes in oak leaf tannins and nutrients as a cause of spring feeding by winter moth caterpillars

TL;DR: The content of oak leaf tannins, which inhibit the growth of winter moth larvae, increases during the summer and may render leaves less suitable for insect growth by further reducing the availability of nitrogen and perhaps also by influencing leaf palatability.
Book

A hierarchical concept of ecosystems

R. V. O'Neill
TL;DR: A more general line of thought based on hierarchy theory has been proposed in this paper, which suggests an objective way of decomposing ecosystems into their component parts and offers a rewarding method for integrating various schools of ecology.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Canonical Distribution of Commonness and Rarity: Part I

F. W. Preston
- 01 Apr 1962 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors take up a point inerely mentioned in 1948 that not only is the distribution lognormal, but the constants or parameters seem to be restricted in a peculiar way.