How context dependent are species interactions?
Rice University · University of Arizona
Abstract
The net effects of interspecific species interactions on individuals and populations vary in both sign (-, 0, +) and magnitude (strong to weak). Interaction outcomes are context-dependent when the sign and/or magnitude change as a function of the biotic or abiotic context. While context dependency appears to be common, its distribution in nature is poorly described. Here, we used meta-analysis to quantify variation in species interaction outcomes (competition, mutualism, or predation) for 247 published articles. Contrary to our expectations, variation in the magnitude of effect sizes did not differ among species interactions, and while mutualism was most likely to change sign across contexts (and predation…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 90.84
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 61
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Mutualism (biology)
- Ecology
- Interspecific competition
- Abiotic component
- Biology
- Predation
- Context (archaeology)
- Competition (biology)
- Life in Land