Mechanisms of Maintenance of Species Diversity

2000 Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 6,395 citations

Abstract

▪ Abstract The focus of most ideas on diversity maintenance is species coexistence, which may be stable or unstable. Stable coexistence can be quantified by the long-term rates at which community members recover from low density. Quantification shows that coexistence mechanisms function in two major ways: They may be (a) equalizing because they tend to minimize average fitness differences between species, or (b) stabilizing because they tend to increase negative intraspecific interactions relative to negative interspecific interactions. Stabilizing mechanisms are essential for species coexistence and include traditional mechanisms such as resource partitioning and frequency-dependent predation, as well as mechanisms that depend on fluctuations in population densities and environmental factors in space and time. Equalizing mechanisms contribute to stable coexistence because they reduce large average fitness inequalities which might negate the effects of stabilizing mechanisms. Models of unstable coexitence, in which species diversity slowly decays over time, have focused almost exclusively on equalizing mechanisms. These models would be more robust if they also included stabilizing mechanisms, which arise in many and varied ways but need not be adequate for full stability of a system. Models of unstable coexistence invite a broader view of diversity maintenance incorporating species turnover.

Keywords

Intraspecific competitionCoexistence theoryInterspecific competitionEcologyDiversity (politics)BiologyDensity dependenceStability (learning theory)PopulationResource (disambiguation)Computer science

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Coexistence on a Seasonal Resource

A model is presented giving conditions for competitive coexistence on a single resource with seasonal productivity. It is assumed that individuals can allocate time to foraging ...

1989 The American Naturalist 88 citations

Publication Info

Year
2000
Type
article
Volume
31
Issue
1
Pages
343-366
Citations
6395
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

6395
OpenAlex

Cite This

Peter Chesson (2000). Mechanisms of Maintenance of Species Diversity. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics , 31 (1) , 343-366. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.31.1.343

Identifiers

DOI
10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.31.1.343