Park's Tribolium Competition Experiments: A Non-equilibrium Species Coexistence Hypothesis

  • Jeffrey Edmunds
  • , J. M. Cushing
  • , R. F. Costantino
  • , Shandelle M. Henson
  • , Brian Dennis
  • , R. A. Desharnais

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

1. In this journal 35 years ago, P. H. Leslie, T. Park and D. B. Mertz reported competitive exclusion data for two Tribolium species. It is less well-known that they also reported 'difficult to interpret' coexistence data. We suggest that the species exclusion and the species coexistence are consequences of a stable coexistence two-cycle in the presence of two stable competitive exclusion equilibria. 2. A stage-structured insect population model for two interacting species forecasts that as interspecific interaction is increased there occurs a sequence of dynamic changes (bifurcations) in which the classic Lotka-Volterra-type scenario with two stable competitive exclusion equilibria is altered abruptly to a novel scenario with three locally stable entities; namely, two competitive exclusion equilibria and a stable coexistence cycle. This scenario is novel in that it predicts the competitive coexistence of two nearly identical species on a single limiting resource and does so under circumstances of increased interspecific competition. This prediction is in contradiction to classical tenets of competition theory.
Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)703-712
JournalJournal of Animal Ecology
Volume72
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2003

Keywords

  • Competitive coexistence
  • Competitive exclusion
  • Flour beetle
  • Thomas Park

Disciplines

  • Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

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