When everything is not everywhere but species evolve: an alternative method to model adaptive properties of marine ecosystems
Author(s)
Sauterey, Boris; Ward, Ben A.; Bowler, Chris; Claessen, David; Follows, Michael J
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The functional and taxonomic biogeography of marine microbial systems reflects the current state of an evolving system. Current models of marine microbial systems and biogeochemical cycles do not reflect this fundamental organizing principle. Here, we investigate the evolutionary adaptive potential of marine microbial systems under environmental change and introduce explicit Darwinian adaptation into an ocean modelling framework, simulating evolving phytoplankton communities in space and time. To this end, we adopt tools from adaptive dynamics theory, evaluating the fitness of invading mutants over annual timescales, replacing the resident if a fitter mutant arises. Using the evolutionary framework, we examine how community assembly, specifically the emergence of phytoplankton cell size diversity, reflects the combined effects of bottom-up and top-down controls. When compared with a species-selection approach, based on the paradigm that “Everything is everywhere, but the environment selects”, we show that (i) the selected optimal trait values are similar; (ii) the patterns emerging from the adaptive model are more robust, but (iii) the two methods lead to different predictions in terms of emergent diversity. We demonstrate that explicitly evolutionary approaches to modelling marine microbial populations and functionality are feasible and practical in time-varying, space-resolving settings and provide a new tool for exploring evolutionary interactions on a range of timescales in the ocean.
Date issued
2014-10Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary SciencesJournal
Journal of Plankton Research
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Citation
Sauterey, B., B. A. Ward, M. J. Follows, C. Bowler, and D. Claessen. “When Everything Is Not Everywhere but Species Evolve: An Alternative Method to Model Adaptive Properties of Marine Ecosystems.” Journal of Plankton Research 37, no. 1 (October 3, 2014): 28–47.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0142-7873
1464-3774