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Article
Indirect Effects of Environmental Change in Resource Competition Models
The American Naturalist (2015)
  • Peter B. Adler
Abstract
Anthropogenic environmental change can affect species directly by altering physiological rates or indirectly by changing competitive outcomes. The unknown strength of competition-mediated indirect effects makes it difficult to predict species abundances in the face of ongoing environmental change. Theory developed with phenomenological competition models shows that indirect effects are weak when coexistence is strongly stabilized, but these models lack a mechanistic link between environmental change and species performance. To extend existing theory, we examined the relationship between coexistence and indirect effects in mechanistic resource competition models. We defined environmental change as a change in resource supply points and quantified the resulting competition-mediated indirect effects on species abundances. We found that the magnitude of indirect effects increases in proportion to niche overlap. However, indirect effects also depend on differences in how competitors respond to the change in resource supply, an insight hidden in nonmechanistic models. Our analysis demonstrates the value of using niche overlap to predict the strength of indirect effects and clarifies the types of indirect effects that global change can have on competing species.
Disciplines
Publication Date
2015
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1086/683676
Citation Information
Peter B. Adler. "Indirect Effects of Environmental Change in Resource Competition Models" The American Naturalist Vol. 186 Iss. 6 (2015) p. 766 - 776
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/peter_adler/120/