Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Concepts and problems
- 2 Nonequilibrium in communities
- 3 Interspecific competition: definition and effects on species
- 4 Interspecific competition: effects in communities and conclusion
- 5 Noncompetitive mechanisms responsible for niche restriction and segregation
- 6 Patterns over evolutionary time, present mass extinctions
- 7 Some detailed examples at the population/metapopulation level
- 8 Some detailed examples at the community level
- 9 Some detailed biogeographical/macroecological patterns
- 10 An autecological comparison: the ecology of some Aspidogastrea
- 11 What explains the differences found? A summary, and prospects for an ecology of the future
- References
- Taxonomic index
- Subject index
2 - Nonequilibrium in communities
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Concepts and problems
- 2 Nonequilibrium in communities
- 3 Interspecific competition: definition and effects on species
- 4 Interspecific competition: effects in communities and conclusion
- 5 Noncompetitive mechanisms responsible for niche restriction and segregation
- 6 Patterns over evolutionary time, present mass extinctions
- 7 Some detailed examples at the population/metapopulation level
- 8 Some detailed examples at the community level
- 9 Some detailed biogeographical/macroecological patterns
- 10 An autecological comparison: the ecology of some Aspidogastrea
- 11 What explains the differences found? A summary, and prospects for an ecology of the future
- References
- Taxonomic index
- Subject index
Summary
Definition and evolution of communities
Ecological community is not a term that is used uniformly by all authors, and there is much disagreement about how communities may have evolved. In this section, I discuss definitions given for ecological communities and their evolution.
Giller and Gee (1987) review the different ways the term community is used, and the problems arising from these different usages. Fauth et al. (1996) defined communities as all species co-occurring at the same time, irrespective of taxon; guilds are species that use the same class of resources. They defined assemblages as groups of species of one taxon (e.g., birds) within a community. According to Cornell (2001), communities are collections of species living contemporaneously in the same place, consisting of individuals that are spatially interspersed, with the potential of direct or indirect interaction. Following Whittaker, Levin (1992) points out that “communities” and “ecosystems” are arbitrary subdivisions of a “gradation of local assemblages.” Communities are not well integrated units, because species within them respond individualistically to the environment. Lawton (2000) asks: how many species constitute a community? There is no logical break between populations of single species and of many, and there is a tendency to take several species of a single taxon as comprising a community. Lawton points out that entire communities are almost impossible to study, with the exception of some in very simple habitats such as water-filled tree holes.
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- Nonequilibrium Ecology , pp. 27 - 48Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006