Scientists find universal rules for food-web stability
The findings, published in this week's issue of Science, conclude that food-web stability is enhanced when many diverse predator-prey links connect high and intermediate trophic levels. The computations also reveal that small ecosystems follow other rules than large ecosystems: differences in the strength of predator-prey links increase the stability of small webs, but destabilize larger webs. Natural ecosystems consist of interwoven food chains, in which individual animal or plant species function as predator or prey. Potential food webs not only differ by their species composition, but also vary in their stability. Observable food webs are stable food webs, with the relationships between their species remaining constant over relatively long periods of time.
Understanding complex systems such as food webs present major challenges to science. They can either be examined by observing natural environments, or by computer simulations. To enable computer simulations of such systems, scientists often have to make simplifying assumptions, keeping the number of model parameters as low as possible. Yet, the computational demands of such simulations are high and their relevance is often limited.
Innovative methodology
Scientists from the Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems (MPIPKS) in Dresden, Germany, have developed a new method that allows them to efficiently analyze the impact of innumerable parameters on complex systems.
"By using a method called generalized modeling, we examine whether a given food web can, in principle, be stable, i.e., whether its species can coexist in the long term," says Thilo Gross from MPIPKS. Complex ecosystems can thus be simulated and analyzed under almost any conditions. "In this way we can estimate which parameters will keep ecosystems stable and which will upset their balance."
The method can also be used for examining other complex systems, such as human metabolism or gene regulation.
Generalists stabilize, specialists destabilize
Applying this innovative modeling approach together with colleagues at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) in Laxenburg, Austria, and Princeton University, USA, the scientists have succeeded in discovering not just one, but several universal rules in the dynamics of ecosystems.
"Food-web stability is enhanced when species at high trophic levels feed on multiple prey species and species at intermediate trophic levels are fed upon by multiple predator species," says Ulf Dieckmann of IIASA.
The scientists have also identified additional stabilizing and destabilizing factors within ecosystems. Ecosystems with high densities of predator-prey links are less likely to be stable, while a strong dependence of predation on predator density destabilizes the system. On the other hand, a strong dependence of predation on prey density has a stabilizing impact on food webs.
Differences between small and large systems
A further important finding is that food webs consisting of only a few species behave qualitatively different from webs consisting of many species.
"Small ecosystems apparently follow different rules than large ecosystems," says Ulf Dieckmann. "Systems with fewer species are more stable if there are strong interactions between some species, but only weak interactions between others. For food webs with many species, exactly the opposite is true. Extremely strong or weak predator-prey links in nature should therefore be the rarer the more species a food web contains," he concludes.
Source: Max-Planck-Gesellschaft
Related
- Wolves, moose and biodiversity: An unexpected connectionMon, 2 Nov 2009, 1:25:13 EST
- New NIST method accelerates stability testing of soy-based biofuelTue, 13 Jan 2009, 17:22:52 EST
- New antioxidant compounds have been identified in foods such as olive oil, honey and nutsThu, 19 Nov 2009, 12:43:28 EST
- Effect of mutant p53 stability on tumorigenesis and drug designThu, 15 May 2008, 5:49:28 EDT
- Building a better proteinMon, 23 Feb 2009, 15:56:35 EST
Other sources
- Scientists Find Universal Rules For Food-web Stabilityfrom Science DailyThu, 6 Aug 2009, 22:14:31 EDT
- Scientists find universal rules for food-web stabilityfrom PhysorgThu, 6 Aug 2009, 15:35:44 EDT
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox!Learn more about
Popular science news articles
- Brain's fear center is equipped with a built-in suffocation sensor
- Implant-based cancer vaccine is first to eliminate tumors in mice
- ORNL 'deep retrofits' can cut home energy bills in half
- Early relationships influence teen pain and depression
- Cosmic 'dig' reveals vestiges of the Milky Way's building blocks
- Beyond sunlight: Explorers census 17,650 ocean species between edge of darkness and black abyss
- Generating electricity from air flow
- Therapy 32 times more cost effective at increasing happiness than money
- Beyond genomics, biologists and engineers decode the next frontier
- It's a gas: New discovery may lead to heartier, high-yielding plants
- Therapy 32 times more cost effective at increasing happiness than money
- Beyond sunlight: Explorers census 17,650 ocean species between edge of darkness and black abyss
- Surface bacteria maintain skin's healthy balance
- Is global warming unstoppable?
- Polyphenols and polyunsaturated fatty acids boost the birth of new neurons
- New evidence that dark chocolate helps ease emotional stress
- African desert rift confirmed as new ocean in the making
- Scientists discover influenza's Achilles heel: Antioxidants
- Nanoparticles used in common household items caused genetic damage in mice
- Therapy 32 times more cost effective at increasing happiness than money