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      Insights into resource consumption, cross-feeding, system collapse, stability and biodiversity from an artificial ecosystem

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          Abstract

          Community ecosystems at very different levels of biological organization often have similar properties. Coexistence of multiple species, cross-feeding, biodiversity and fluctuating population dynamics are just a few of the properties that arise in a range of ecological settings. Here we develop a bottom-up model of consumer–resource interactions, in the form of an artificial ecosystem ‘number soup’, which reflects basic properties of many bacterial and other community ecologies. We demonstrate four key properties of the number soup model: (i) communities self-organize so that all available resources are fully consumed; (ii) reciprocal cross-feeding is a common evolutionary outcome, which evolves in a number of stages, and many transitional species are involved; (iii) the evolved ecosystems are often ‘robust yet fragile’, with keystone species required to prevent the whole system from collapsing; (iv) non-equilibrium dynamics and chaotic patterns are general properties, readily generating rich biodiversity. These properties have been observed in empirical ecosystems, ranging from bacteria to rainforests. Establishing similar properties in an evolutionary model as simple as the number soup suggests that these four properties are ubiquitous features of all community ecosystems, and raises questions about how we interpret ecosystem structure in the context of natural selection.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J R Soc Interface
          J R Soc Interface
          RSIF
          royinterface
          Journal of the Royal Society Interface
          The Royal Society
          1742-5689
          1742-5662
          January 2017
          : 14
          : 126
          : 20160816
          Affiliations
          Department of Mathematics, Uppsala University , 75105 Uppsala, Sweden
          Author notes

          Electronic supplementary material is available online at https://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3660818.

          Author information
          http://orcid.org/0000-0003-2640-6490
          Article
          PMC5310732 PMC5310732 5310732 rsif20160816
          10.1098/rsif.2016.0816
          5310732
          28100827
          62802353-06d5-4757-9159-0bff3ac2cfc5
          © 2017 The Author(s)

          Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved.

          History
          : 8 October 2016
          : 21 December 2016
          Funding
          Funded by: European Commission, http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000780;
          Categories
          1004
          24
          16
          70
          Life Sciences–Mathematics interface
          Research Article
          Custom metadata
          January, 2017

          ecosystem evolution,system-level property,community ecology,emergence,consumer–resource interactions

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