Getting more by asking for less: Linking species interactions to species co-distributions in metacommunities

One of the more difficult challenges in community ecology is inferring species interactions on the basis of patterns in the spatial distribution of organisms. At its core, the problem is that distributional patterns reflect the 'realized niche', the net result of a complex interplay of pro...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Barbier, Matthieu, Bunin, Guy, Leibold, Mathew A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Peer Community In 2025-01-01
Series:Peer Community Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peercommunityjournal.org/articles/10.24072/pcjournal.483/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1825206349683752960
author Barbier, Matthieu
Bunin, Guy
Leibold, Mathew A.
author_facet Barbier, Matthieu
Bunin, Guy
Leibold, Mathew A.
author_sort Barbier, Matthieu
collection DOAJ
description One of the more difficult challenges in community ecology is inferring species interactions on the basis of patterns in the spatial distribution of organisms. At its core, the problem is that distributional patterns reflect the 'realized niche', the net result of a complex interplay of processes involving dispersal, environmental, and interaction effects. Disentangling these effects can be difficult on at least two distinct levels. From a statistical point of view, splitting a population's variation into contributions from its interaction partners, abiotic environment and spatial proximity requires 'natural experiments' where all three factors somehow vary independently from each other. On a more conceptual level, it is not even clear how to meaningfully separate these processes: for instance, species interactions could depend on the state of the abiotic and biotic environment, and these two processes may combine in highly non-additive ways. Here we show that the latter issue arises almost inescapably, even in a simple theoretical setting designed to minimize it. Using a model of competitive metacommunity dynamics where direct species interactions are assumed to be context-independent, we show that inferring these interactions accurately from cross-species correlations is a major challenge under all but the most restrictive assumptions. However, we also find that it is possible to estimate the statistical moments (mean value and variance) of the species interactions distribution much more robustly, even if the precise values cannot be inferred. Consequently, we argue that study of multi-species spatial patterns can still be informative for theoretical approaches that build on statistical distributions of species parameters to predict macroscopic outcomes of community assembly.
format Article
id doaj-art-4d7abb6b66e2494283e8b340c1a2e45d
institution Kabale University
issn 2804-3871
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher Peer Community In
record_format Article
series Peer Community Journal
spelling doaj-art-4d7abb6b66e2494283e8b340c1a2e45d2025-02-07T10:34:52ZengPeer Community InPeer Community Journal2804-38712025-01-01510.24072/pcjournal.48310.24072/pcjournal.483Getting more by asking for less: Linking species interactions to species co-distributions in metacommunities Barbier, Matthieu0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0669-8927Bunin, Guy1Leibold, Mathew A.2https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3954-3187CIRAD, UMR PHIM, 34090 Montpellier, France; PHIM Plant Health Institute, Univ Montpellier, CIRAD, INRAE, Institut Agro, IRD, 34090 Montpellier, France; Institut Natura e Teoria en Pirenèus, 09400 Surba, FranceDepartment of Physics, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 3200003, IsraelBiology Department, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611-8525, USAOne of the more difficult challenges in community ecology is inferring species interactions on the basis of patterns in the spatial distribution of organisms. At its core, the problem is that distributional patterns reflect the 'realized niche', the net result of a complex interplay of processes involving dispersal, environmental, and interaction effects. Disentangling these effects can be difficult on at least two distinct levels. From a statistical point of view, splitting a population's variation into contributions from its interaction partners, abiotic environment and spatial proximity requires 'natural experiments' where all three factors somehow vary independently from each other. On a more conceptual level, it is not even clear how to meaningfully separate these processes: for instance, species interactions could depend on the state of the abiotic and biotic environment, and these two processes may combine in highly non-additive ways. Here we show that the latter issue arises almost inescapably, even in a simple theoretical setting designed to minimize it. Using a model of competitive metacommunity dynamics where direct species interactions are assumed to be context-independent, we show that inferring these interactions accurately from cross-species correlations is a major challenge under all but the most restrictive assumptions. However, we also find that it is possible to estimate the statistical moments (mean value and variance) of the species interactions distribution much more robustly, even if the precise values cannot be inferred. Consequently, we argue that study of multi-species spatial patterns can still be informative for theoretical approaches that build on statistical distributions of species parameters to predict macroscopic outcomes of community assembly. https://peercommunityjournal.org/articles/10.24072/pcjournal.483/Metacommunity, Community assembly, Ecological interactions, Inference
spellingShingle Barbier, Matthieu
Bunin, Guy
Leibold, Mathew A.
Getting more by asking for less: Linking species interactions to species co-distributions in metacommunities
Peer Community Journal
Metacommunity, Community assembly, Ecological interactions, Inference
title Getting more by asking for less: Linking species interactions to species co-distributions in metacommunities
title_full Getting more by asking for less: Linking species interactions to species co-distributions in metacommunities
title_fullStr Getting more by asking for less: Linking species interactions to species co-distributions in metacommunities
title_full_unstemmed Getting more by asking for less: Linking species interactions to species co-distributions in metacommunities
title_short Getting more by asking for less: Linking species interactions to species co-distributions in metacommunities
title_sort getting more by asking for less linking species interactions to species co distributions in metacommunities
topic Metacommunity, Community assembly, Ecological interactions, Inference
url https://peercommunityjournal.org/articles/10.24072/pcjournal.483/
work_keys_str_mv AT barbiermatthieu gettingmorebyaskingforlesslinkingspeciesinteractionstospeciescodistributionsinmetacommunities
AT buninguy gettingmorebyaskingforlesslinkingspeciesinteractionstospeciescodistributionsinmetacommunities
AT leiboldmathewa gettingmorebyaskingforlesslinkingspeciesinteractionstospeciescodistributionsinmetacommunities