The competitive exclusion principle in stochastic environments
Alexandru Hening, Dang H. Nguyen

TL;DR
This paper investigates how stochastic environmental fluctuations, including white noise and random switching between states, can enable coexistence of competing species limited by fewer resources, challenging traditional exclusion principles.
Contribution
It demonstrates that stochastic environmental variability can facilitate species coexistence even under conditions where deterministic models predict exclusion, especially with nonlinear dependencies or environmental switching.
Findings
White noise leads to competitive exclusion with linear growth-resource dependence.
Nonlinear dependence or nonlinear noise allows coexistence on fewer resources.
Environmental switching can enable coexistence even with linear growth-resource dependence.
Abstract
In its simplest form, the competitive exclusion principle states that a number of species competing for a smaller number of resources cannot coexist. However, it has been observed empirically that in some settings it is possible to have coexistence. One example is Hutchinson's `paradox of the plankton'. This is an instance where a large number of phytoplankton species coexist while competing for a very limited number of resources. Both experimental and theoretical studies have shown that temporal fluctuations of the environment can facilitate coexistence for competing species. Hutchinson conjectured that one can get coexistence because nonequilibrium conditions would make it possible for different species to be favored by the environment at different times. In this paper we show in various settings how a variable (stochastic) environment enables a set of competing species limited by a…
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