Eco-evolutionary Model of Rapid Phenotypic Diversification in Species-Rich Communities
Paula Villa Mart\'in, Jorge Hidalgo, Rafael Rubio de Casas, and Miguel, A. Mu\~noz

TL;DR
This paper presents a computational eco-evolutionary model that explains rapid phenotypic diversification and stable coexistence in species-rich communities, aligning with recent empirical findings on plant community dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a simple, rule-based model capturing rapid diversification and long-term coexistence, advancing understanding of eco-evolutionary feedbacks in diverse communities.
Findings
Highly specialized species promote community stability
Phenotypically equivalent species can coexist long-term
Model predictions align with empirical plant community data
Abstract
Evolutionary and ecosystem dynamics are often treated as different processes --operating at separate timescales-- even if evidence reveals that rapid evolutionary changes can feed back into ecological interactions. A recent long-term field experiment has explicitly shown that communities of competing plant species can experience very fast phenotypic diversification, and that this gives rise to enhanced complementarity in resource exploitation and to enlarged ecosystem-level productivity. Here, we build on progress made in recent years in the integration of eco-evolutionary dynamics, and present a computational approach aimed at describing these empirical findings in detail. In particular we model a community of organisms of different but similar species evolving in time through mechanisms of birth, competition, sexual reproduction, descent with modification, and death. Based on simple…
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