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      Competitive mechanisms change with ontogeny in coral-dwelling gobies

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      Ecology
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          Competition and Biodiversity in Spatially Structured Habitats

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            Competition, Disturbance, and Community Organization: The Provision and Subsequent Utilization of Space in a Rocky Intertidal Community

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              A niche for neutrality.

              Ecologists now recognize that controversy over the relative importance of niches and neutrality cannot be resolved by analyzing species abundance patterns. Here, we use classical coexistence theory to reframe the debate in terms of stabilizing mechanisms (niches) and fitness equivalence (neutrality). The neutral model is a special case where stabilizing mechanisms are absent and species have equivalent fitness. Instead of asking whether niches or neutral processes structure communities, we advocate determining the degree to which observed diversity reflects strong stabilizing mechanisms overcoming large fitness differences or weak stabilization operating on species of similar fitness. To answer this question, we propose combining data on per capita growth rates with models to: (i) quantify the strength of stabilizing processes; (ii) quantify fitness inequality and compare it with stabilization; and (iii) manipulate frequency dependence in growth to test the consequences of stabilization and fitness equivalence for coexistence.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ecology
                Ecology
                Wiley-Blackwell
                0012-9658
                November 2015
                November 2015
                : 96
                : 11
                : 3090-3101
                Article
                10.1890/14-1689.1
                27070026
                2e4f23f2-fe7f-4853-a8c3-5b60d4e52e67
                © 2015

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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