A basic community dynamics experiment: disentangling deterministic and
stochastic processes in structuring ecological communities
Abstract
Community dynamics are governed by two opposed processes: species
sorting, which produces deterministic dynamics leading to an equilibrium
state, and ecological drift, which produces stochastic dynamics. Despite
a great deal of theoretical and empirical work aiming to demonstrate the
predominance of one or the other of these processes, the importance of
drift in structuring communities and maintaining species diversity
remains contested. Here we present the results of a basic community
dynamics experiment using floating aquatic plants, designed to measure
the relative contributions of species sorting, ecological drift to
community change over about a dozen generations. We found that species
sorting became overwhelmingly dominant as the experiment progressed, and
directed communities towards a stable equilibrium state maintained by
negative frequency-dependent selection. The dynamics of any particular
species depended on how far its initial frequency was from its
equilibrium frequency, however, and consequently the balance of sorting
and drift varied among species.