SCALE-DEPENDENT CONSTRAINTS ON FOOD-WEB STRUCTURE

被引:84
|
作者
MARTINEZ, ND
机构
来源
AMERICAN NATURALIST | 1994年 / 144卷 / 06期
关键词
D O I
10.1086/285719
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
For over a decade, ecologists have repeatedly asserted that community food webs possess fundamental properties that are roughly constant among webs with widely varying numbers of species. This assertion of ''scale invariance'' is reevaluated here among 60 food webs originally published in its support. This analysis contradicts the conventional view of scale invariance by demonstrating highly significant trends in six of eight properties investigated. As the size of food webs increases to 54 trophic species, the fraction of intermediate species, the links/species ratio, and the fraction of links between intermediate species also increase. Concurrently, the fractions of top species, basal species, and links between top and basal species decrease. Only one of these properties, the links/species ratio, is widely thought not to be scale invariant. These trends corroborate hypotheses of scale-dependent food-web structure that successfully predict properties of new, high-quality food webs containing many more than 54 species. This success suggests that general, quantitative, and successfully predictive constraints in fundamental aspects of ecological organization have been discovered. Such discoveries are particularly important, because the lack of general prediction among all terrestrial and aquatic systems seriously impedes the maturation of ecology as a scientific discipline.
引用
收藏
页码:935 / 953
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Untangling food-web structure in an ephemeral ecosystem
    O'Neill, Brian J.
    Thorp, James H.
    FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, 2014, 59 (07) : 1462 - 1473
  • [22] The effect of seasonal variation on the community structure and food-web attributes of two streams: implications for food-web science
    Thompson, RM
    Townsend, CR
    OIKOS, 1999, 87 (01) : 75 - 88
  • [23] Astrophysical and cosmological constraints on a scale-dependent gravitational coupling
    Bertolami, O
    GarciaBellido, J
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MODERN PHYSICS D, 1996, 5 (04): : 363 - 373
  • [24] Effects of sampling effort on characterization of food-web structure
    Martinez, ND
    Hawkins, BA
    Dawah, HA
    Feifarek, BP
    ECOLOGY, 1999, 80 (03) : 1044 - 1055
  • [25] Constraints on a scale-dependent bias from galaxy clustering
    Amendola, L.
    Menegoni, E.
    Di Porto, C.
    Corsi, M.
    Branchini, E.
    PHYSICAL REVIEW D, 2017, 95 (02)
  • [26] FOOD-WEB STRUCTURE AT EQUILIBRIUM AND FAR FROM IT - IS IT THE SAME
    MICHALSKI, J
    ARDITI, R
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1995, 259 (1355) : 217 - 222
  • [27] Environmental proteomics, biodiversity statistics and food-web structure
    Gotelli, Nicholas J.
    Ellison, Aaron M.
    Ballif, Bryan A.
    TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2012, 27 (08) : 436 - 442
  • [28] Influence of food-web structure on the biodegradability of lake sediment
    Harrault, Loic
    Allard, Beatrice
    Danger, Michael
    Maunoury-Danger, Florence
    Guilpart, Alexis
    Lacroix, Gerard
    FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, 2012, 57 (11) : 2390 - 2400
  • [29] Food-web topology varies with spatial scale in a patchy environment
    Thompson, RM
    Townsend, CR
    ECOLOGY, 2005, 86 (07) : 1916 - 1925
  • [30] Scale-Dependent Point Selection Methods for Web Maps
    Gröbe M.
    Burghardt D.
    KN - Journal of Cartography and Geographic Information, 2021, 71 (3) : 143 - 154