TL;DR
This study demonstrates that seed banks in phytoplankton communities help maintain species diversity over decades by buffering against environmental fluctuations and interactions, emphasizing their ecological importance.
Contribution
The paper introduces a metacommunity model incorporating seed banks for phytoplankton, highlighting their role in biodiversity preservation under varying environmental and interaction conditions.
Findings
Seed banks enable species persistence over 30 years.
Resting stages buffer against seasonal extinctions.
Seed banks facilitate resilience to environmental changes.
Abstract
Seed formation is part of the reproductive cycle, leading to the accumulation of resistance stages that can withstand harsh environmental conditions for long periods of time. At the community level, multiple species with such long-lasting life stages can be more likely to coexist. While the implications of this process for biodiversity have been studied in terrestrial plants, seed banks are usually neglected in phytoplankton multispecies dynamic models, in spite of widespread empirical evidence for such seed banks. In this study, we build a metacommunity model of interacting phytoplankton species, including a resting stage supplying the seed bank. The model is parameterized with empirically-driven growth rate functions and field-based interaction estimates, which include both facilitative and competitive interactions. Exchanges between compartments (coastal pelagic cells, coastal…
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