multispecies competition
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2021 ◽  
Vol 657 ◽  
pp. 109-121
Author(s):  
LK Olinger ◽  
A Chaves-Fonnegra ◽  
IC Enochs ◽  
ME Brandt

Competition for limited space is an important driver of benthic community structure on coral reefs. Studies of coral-algae and coral-sponge interactions often show competitive dominance of algae and sponges over corals, but little is known about the outcomes when these groups compete in a multispecies context. Multispecies competition is increasingly common on Caribbean coral reefs as environmental degradation drives loss of reef-building corals and proliferation of alternative organisms such as algae and sponges. New methods are needed to understand multispecies competition, whose outcomes can differ widely from pairwise competition and range from coexistence to exclusion. In this study, we used 3D photogrammetry and image analyses to compare pairwise and multispecies competition on reefs in the US Virgin Islands. Sponges (Desmapsamma anchorata, Aplysina cauliformis) and macroalgae (Lobophora variegata) were attached to coral (Porites astreoides) and arranged to simulate multispecies (coral-sponge-algae) and pairwise (coral-sponge, coral-algae) competition. Photogrammetric 3D models were produced to measure surface area change of coral and sponges, and photographs were analyzed to measure sponge-coral, algae-coral, and algae-sponge overgrowth. Coral lost more surface area and was overgrown more rapidly by the sponge D. anchorata in multispecies treatments, when the sponge was also in contact with algae. Algae contact may confer a competitive advantage to the sponge D. anchorata, but not to A. cauliformis, underscoring the species-specificity of these interactions. This first application of photogrammetry to study competition showed meaningful losses of living coral that, combined with significant overgrowths by competitors detected from image analyses, exposed a novel outcome of multispecies competition.


Crop Science ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 1302-1310 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali Reza Yousefi ◽  
Hassan Karimmojeni ◽  
Hamid Rahimian Mashhadi ◽  
Rouhollah Amini

2014 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 367-379 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aysegul Birand ◽  
Ernest Barany

Author(s):  
Lei Zhao ◽  
Huayong Zhang ◽  
Tousheng Huang ◽  
Xinqiang Zhu ◽  
Lu Han

In order to study the stability of chaotic behaviors, a nonlinear dynamical model of the competing multispecies with a predator is investigated. A series of numerical simulations is demonstrated via wave diagram and phase diagram. The results show that the chaos can change into either oscillation or ordinary equilibrium as the attacking rate of the predator increases. Moreover, chaos in the system becomes fragile and even vanishes when the attacking rate reaches 0.0186. This study also exhibits the transformation in phase diagram from a strange attractor to a stable equilibrium.


2006 ◽  
Vol 72 (11) ◽  
pp. 7383-7385 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyo-Jin Ahn ◽  
Hyun-Joon La ◽  
Larry J. Forney

ABSTRACT A device for simultaneously measuring the relative fitness of multiple bacterial populations was developed and evaluated. The new device eliminates the need to construct strains with selectively neutral markers so that strains can be readily distinguished, and it provides a means to perform multispecies competition experiments.


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