Density dependence promotes species coexistence and provides a unifying explanation for distinct productivity-diversity relationships

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Abstract

Understanding diversity patterns in complex communities, such as microbial consortia, requires a mechanistic framework appropriate for many species. Negative density dependence is often utilized in complex ecosystem models, typically as a density-dependent mortality term for a population, but its full impact on community structure remains unclear. Here we use mechanistic population models of resource consumption to examine the effects of negative density dependence and develop a tractable framework for understanding diversity patterns in complex systems. To provide mechanistic grounding, we quantify how density-dependent mortality expands coexistence zones along resource gradients in simple communities using graphical analysis. We then derive an analytical, ecologically insightful formula predicting species abundances in subsets (guilds) of complex communities, in which many species share a resource or predator. Finally, we use the formula to explain how distinct relationships between productivity and diversity emerge from the resulting mechanistic framework, providing insights into previously unreconciled observed patterns.

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