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      Metacommunity of a host metapopulation: explaining patterns and structures of a fish parasite metacommunity in a Neotropical floodplain basin

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          Partitioning the turnover and nestedness components of beta diversity

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            The metacommunity concept: a framework for multi-scale community ecology

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              Conceptual synthesis in community ecology.

              Community ecology is often perceived as a "mess, "given the seemingly vast number of processes that can underlie the many patterns of interest, and the apparent uniqueness of each study system. However, at the most general level, patterns in the composition and diversity of species--the subject matter of community ecology--are influenced by only four classes of process: selection, drift, speciation, and dispersal. Selection represents deterministic fitness differences among species, drift represents stochastic changes in species abundance, speciation creates new species, and dispersal is the movement of organisms across space. All theoretical and conceptual models in community ecology can be understood with respect to their emphasis on these four processes. Empirical evidence exists for all of these processes and many of their interactions, with a predominance of studies on selection. Organizing the material of community ecology according to this framework can clarify the essential similarities and differences among the many conceptual and theoretical approaches to the discipline, and it can also allow for the articulation of a very general theory of community dynamics: species are added to communities via speciation and dispersal, and the relative abundances of these species are then shaped by drift and selection, as well as ongoing dispersal to drive community dynamics.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Hydrobiologia
                Hydrobiologia
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0018-8158
                1573-5117
                December 2021
                October 06 2021
                December 2021
                : 848
                : 21
                : 5103-5118
                Article
                10.1007/s10750-021-04695-7
                e0e2c180-0734-4951-91dc-880244d131c8
                © 2021

                https://www.springer.com/tdm

                https://www.springer.com/tdm

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