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The answer may be that both are
right, and the difference simply
depends on scale. The benefit of
metacommunity theory is that it
allows ecologists to reconcile these
differences. It enables them to look
for explanations on both a local and
regional scale.
A metacommunity might be a
set of half a dozen deciduous trees
within a park, with each tree an
individual community. However,
it could equally be all the deciduous
forests in temperate zones all around
the world. What metacommunity
theory does is allow ecologists to
work at any scale, at least in theory.
Umbrella framework
According to Mathew Leibold, the
study of metacommunities brings
together many seemingly disparate
branches of ecology and apparently
conflicting theories. It may make
it easier, for example, to resolve
the century-old debate between the
“deterministic,” niche-based theory
of community ecology, in which
species diversity is determined
by each species’ ecological
niche, and “stochastic” (random)
theory, which emphasizes the
importance of chance colonization
and ecological drift (random
fluctuations in population sizes).
Metacommunity theory provides
an umbrella framework for seeing
how deterministic and stochastic
processes can interact to form
natural communities. It allows
ecologists to state that patterns
of biodiversity are determined both
by local biological features, such
as the balance of sun and shade in
rock pools or variations in water
quality in streams, and by regional
METACOMMUNITIES
stochastic processes, such as the
spread of a species by freak storms
or a die-off due to an epidemic.
It also acknowledges that regional
changes can be caused by the
combined effect of local ones.
Finding metacommunities
One of the problems with Leibold’s
concept is that in practice it is
not so straightforward to identify
the separate components of a
metacommunity. For the fish and
other water creatures in different
lakes within a lake district, for
instance, each lake may clearly be
a distinct community. However, for
those birds able to fly between the
lakes in minutes, the different lakes
are all part of the same single
community. This may explain why
much of the continuing work and
research on metacommunities
Metacommunity
lake 4
lake 2
lake 5
rushes
rushes
frog
frog
mosquito
dragonfly
pond weed
lake 3
algae
algae
lake 1
duck
perch
perch
In this example of a metacommunity, arrows show
how species move between lakes to feed or breed. Seeds
and the spores of algae are dispersed by the wind.
heron
heron
carp cormorant
cormorant
dragonfly
mosquito
mayfly
US_190-193_Metacommunities.indd 192 12/11/18 6:25 PM