Food web - Quantitative Models and History
Learn how food‑web theory evolved, how quantitative metrics like connectance are applied, and how complexity influences stability and biodiversity.
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What did Robert Paine’s intertidal experiments highlight regarding species diversity?
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Summary
Food Webs: Structure, Complexity, and Stability
Introduction
Food webs are networks that show how energy flows through ecosystems via feeding relationships. Rather than viewing them as simple linear food chains (grass → herbivore → predator), ecologists recognize that ecosystems contain complex interconnected feeding relationships where organisms consume multiple prey items and may be consumed by several predators.
Understanding food web structure is crucial because it directly affects ecosystem stability, productivity, and resilience to disturbances like species loss. This section focuses on how ecologists quantitatively describe and analyze food webs to predict ecosystem behavior.
Quantifying Food Web Structure
Basic Measurements
When ecologists study food webs, they collect several fundamental pieces of data:
Species composition: Which species are present in the ecosystem
Species richness (S): The total number of species
Trophic links (L): The number of feeding connections between species
Biomass and productivity: The total amount of living material and energy production
These measurements form the foundation for analyzing food web properties mathematically.
Connectance: A Key Metric
One of the most important metrics in food web analysis is connectance, which measures how densely interconnected a food web is. It's calculated as:
$$C = \frac{L}{S^2}$$
Where:
$L$ = number of trophic links (feeding relationships)
$S$ = number of species
Connectance represents the proportion of all possible feeding relationships that actually occur. The denominator $S^2$ comes from the fact that each species could theoretically feed on every other species (including itself), giving a maximum of $S^2$ possible connections. In practice, the maximum is sometimes given as $S(S-1)/2$ when considering undirected connections.
Example: A food web with 10 species and 25 feeding links has a connectance of $C = \frac{25}{100} = 0.25$. This means 25% of all theoretically possible feeding relationships are actually present.
Network Properties and Structure
Food webs don't distribute feeding relationships randomly. Instead, they exhibit several important structural patterns that influence how ecosystems function.
Nestedness
Nestedness occurs when the diet of specialist species is entirely contained within the diet of more generalist species. Imagine a specialist herbivore that only eats clover, while a generalist herbivore eats clover, grass, and dandelions. The specialist's diet is a "nested" subset of the generalist's diet.
This pattern is common in nature because specialists often occupy narrow ecological niches. Nestedness matters because it affects how energy flows through an ecosystem and how different species interact.
Compartments and Modularity
Rather than being completely interconnected "all-to-all," food webs tend to have compartments—distinct subgroups where:
Strong interactions occur within the group
Weak interactions occur between groups
Think of compartments like semi-isolated communities. One ecosystem might have an aquatic compartment (fish, aquatic insects, algae) and a terrestrial compartment (birds, mammals, plants), with relatively few feeding connections crossing between them.
Modularity is a measure of how pronounced these compartments are. Higher modularity indicates stronger separation between groups. This compartmentalization is important because it can buffer ecosystems against disturbances—if one compartment is disrupted, others may remain relatively stable.
Small-World Properties
Many food webs exhibit "small-world" characteristics, meaning:
Most species have relatively few direct connections (low degree)
Despite this, any two species are typically connected through short chains of feeding relationships
There are often clusters of densely interconnected species within the broader network
This creates an efficient network structure where energy can flow through many pathways, yet most species are "close" to each other in the network.
The Complexity-Stability Paradox
This is perhaps the most conceptually important section: the relationship between food web complexity and ecosystem stability.
The Paradox
Intuitively, you might expect that more complex food webs (more species and more connections) would be more stable. However, early mathematical models by Robert May showed something surprising: adding more species and interactions to a randomly connected network generally decreases its stability.
This seems to contradict real ecosystems, which often are complex and stable. Why?
The Resolution: Interaction Strengths Matter
The key insight is that not all connections are equally strong. In real food webs:
Most feeding relationships are weak interactions—they don't significantly affect population dynamics
Only a few relationships are strong interactions—they substantially influence populations
This heterogeneity in interaction strength is crucial for stability
Weakly interacting species promote stability because fluctuations in one species' population don't cascade dramatically through the network. A predator that eats many prey items and gets most of its energy from only a few preferred prey shows weak interactions with most of its prey.
Structural Features That Enhance Stability
Several food web properties consistently promote stability:
1. Compartmentalization and Modularity When a food web is divided into semi-isolated modules, disturbances remain localized. If a disease wipes out species in one compartment, other compartments continue functioning normally.
2. Redundancy and Omnivory When multiple species occupy similar roles (functional redundancy), losing one species doesn't cause ecosystem collapse. For example, if multiple species can fill the "herbivore" role, the loss of one herbivore won't eliminate herbivory. Similarly, when predators consume prey from multiple trophic levels (omnivory), they create alternative energy pathways.
3. Nested Structure Nestedness can enhance stability by ensuring that specialist species are "backed up" by more flexible generalists. If a specialist species disappears, generalists can compensate for many of its ecological functions.
Biodiversity, Robustness, and Ecosystem Function
Complexity and Stability in Real Ecosystems
Despite the mathematical paradox, real ecosystems with high biodiversity tend to be both complex and stable. This is because:
Higher biodiversity leads to greater productivity: More species means more complete use of available resources
Higher biodiversity increases resilience: Ecosystems with more species can better withstand disturbances and recover from them
Functional redundancy buffers against disturbances: When multiple species perform similar functions, losing one species has minimal ecosystem-level effects
The key difference from May's random models is that real food webs are not random—they have the structured properties (compartmentalization, nested specialization, weak interactions) that promote stability.
Network Fragility and Robustness
Food webs exhibit differential fragility depending on which species are lost:
Hub Species and Network Collapse Some species, called hubs, are highly connected and consume or are consumed by many other species. Removing a hub can have disproportionate effects on the entire network. For example, losing a generalist predator that eats many prey items might cause cascading changes throughout the ecosystem.
Redundant Pathways Increase Robustness Ecosystems with multiple feeding pathways to the same resources are more robust. If one pathway is disrupted, energy and nutrients can still flow through alternative routes. This redundancy is what makes compartmentalized networks with nested structures particularly resilient.
Scaling Laws and Ecosystem Patterns
Food web properties scale predictably across different ecosystems:
Connectance tends to decrease as ecosystems get larger (more species)
Species richness varies dramatically but follows predictable patterns based on habitat type and productivity
Average trophic level (the average number of feeding steps from producers to a species) scales with community properties
These scaling laws suggest underlying principles govern how ecosystems organize themselves regardless of specific location or habitat type.
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Historical Development of Food Web Theory
Understanding how food web concepts developed is useful context:
Robert Paine's work in the 1960s on rocky intertidal zones showed that the complexity of predator-prey relationships was crucial for maintaining species diversity. His classic experiment removed starfish (sea stars) from an intertidal zone, and the ecosystem simplified dramatically as one mussel species competitively dominated.
Robert May's mathematical work in the 1970s demonstrated that randomly assembled complex networks become unstable as they grow. This was counterintuitive and sparked decades of research into why real ecosystems didn't follow this prediction.
Stuart Pimm and others developed more sophisticated models showing that the structure of interactions (which species connect to which) matters far more than simply the number of connections.
These historical insights shape modern food web ecology but are less likely to be tested directly on exams than the quantitative concepts and current understanding of stability mechanisms.
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Emerging Directions: Multitrophic and Cross-Boundary Interactions
Recent food web research recognizes that interactions span multiple trophic levels simultaneously and cross ecosystem boundaries:
Multitrophic interactions emphasize that plants don't just interact with herbivores, and herbivores don't just interact with predators. Instead, changes in plant chemistry can indirectly affect predator populations through changes in herbivore performance.
Cross-boundary subsidies occur when organisms or nutrients move across ecosystem boundaries. For example, salmon returning from the ocean to spawn in rivers bring marine nutrients into freshwater systems, affecting the entire food web. Similarly, aquatic-terrestrial subsidies (like insects emerging from water to feed terrestrial birds) connect ecosystems.
These concepts are important for understanding real-world ecosystems but represent emerging research areas less likely to be core exam material.
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Flashcards
What did Robert Paine’s intertidal experiments highlight regarding species diversity?
The importance of food-web complexity.
According to R. M. May, what can increased complexity lead to in mathematical models?
Instability.
How can food-web complexity be expressed mathematically?
As the product of species number and connectance.
What three phenomena did classic empirical studies document in natural systems?
Omnivory
Trophic cascades
Interaction strengths
What do multitrophic level interactions emphasize regarding plants, herbivores, and predators?
The importance of indirect effects.
What is the formula for food-web connectance ($C$)?
$C = \frac{L}{S^{2}}$ (where $L$ is the number of trophic links and $S$ is the number of species).
What is the formula for the maximum possible binary connections among $S$ species?
$\frac{S(S-1)}{2}$ (where $S$ is the number of species).
What do scaling laws predict in the context of food webs?
The relationship between food-web topology and species richness.
When does nestedness occur in a food web?
When the diet of a specialist species is a subset of the diet of a more generalist species.
What are three common small-world and scale-free properties exhibited by food webs?
Many loosely connected nodes
Dense clustering of a few nodes
Short average path lengths
What are food-web compartments?
Sub-groups with strong interactions within the group and weak interactions between groups.
What is the hypothesized effect of compartments on an ecological network?
They increase network stability.
What are cross-boundary subsidies?
The movement of organisms and nutrients across ecosystem boundaries.
What factor determines whether increased complexity enhances or reduces food-web stability?
Interaction strengths.
Which two features of food webs tend to promote stability?
Weakly interacting species
Modular compartments
What three ecosystem benefits are often associated with higher biodiversity?
Greater productivity
Resilience
Stability of ecosystem processes
How does the loss of species impact an ecosystem's buffer against disturbances?
It reduces redundancy.
Ecological networks are particularly fragile to the removal of which type of species?
Highly connected species (hubs).
What two factors increase a food web's robustness to species loss?
Redundant pathways
Compartmentalization
Which three food-web properties scale predictably across ecosystems?
Connectance
Species richness
Average trophic level
Quiz
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 1: According to R. M. May’s theoretical work, what is a potential effect of increasing complexity in food‑web models?
- It can lead to instability in the model (correct)
- It always enhances stability
- It has no effect on model dynamics
- It simplifies the dynamics of the system
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 2: How is the connectance (C) of a food web calculated from the number of trophic links (L) and the number of species (S)?
- $C = \frac{L}{S^{2}}$ (correct)
- $C = \frac{L}{S}$
- $C = \frac{S^{2}}{L}$
- $C = \frac{L}{\frac{S(S-1)}{2}}$
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 3: Which two scientists are credited with early theoretical analyses of the mathematical properties of food webs?
- Robert May and Stuart Pimm (correct)
- Charles Darwin and Alfred Wallace
- Eugene Odum and Howard T. Odum
- Rachel Carson and Aldo Leopold
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 4: Which metric measures how strongly a food web is divided into relatively independent sub‑groups?
- Modularity (correct)
- Connectance
- Degree distribution
- Nestedness
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 5: One definition of network complexity multiplies which two properties?
- Number of species and connectance (correct)
- Number of trophic levels and modularity
- Average path length and clustering coefficient
- Species richness and nestedness
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 6: How does increasing species richness and interaction complexity affect community stability?
- It can either enhance or reduce stability depending on interaction strengths (correct)
- It always increases stability by adding redundancy
- It invariably destabilizes the network through more links
- It has no effect on stability because only species identity matters
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 7: What characterizes a microbial food web?
- A food web in which microorganisms dominate the trophic levels (correct)
- A network of predator–prey interactions among large vertebrates
- A soil nutrient cycle that lacks any energy flow
- A trophic system composed exclusively of plant producers
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 8: Multitrophic‑level studies emphasize the importance of which type of effects among plants, herbivores, and predators?
- Indirect effects (correct)
- Direct predation only
- Competitive exclusion
- Resource partitioning
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 9: In a nested food web, the diet of a specialist is typically what relative to a generalist’s diet?
- A subset (correct)
- A superset
- Identical to
- Completely distinct from
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 10: What consequence does species loss have on an ecosystem’s buffering capacity?
- It reduces redundancy (correct)
- It increases redundancy
- It has no effect on redundancy
- It creates new redundant pathways
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 11: How does habitat heterogeneity most directly influence ecological networks?
- It influences the flow of energy and matter across the network (correct)
- It eliminates all trophic interactions within the community
- It standardizes species abundances throughout the landscape
- It reduces overall species richness in the system
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 12: Which feeding interaction was reported as widespread in classic empirical food‑web investigations?
- Omnivory (species feeding at multiple trophic levels) (correct)
- Strict herbivory (plants only consumed by herbivores)
- Obligate parasitism (hosts required for parasite survival)
- Specialized predation (predators with a single prey type)
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 13: When building quantitative food‑web models, which set of variables do ecologists typically measure?
- Species composition, species richness, biomass, productivity, and stability (correct)
- Soil pH, temperature, wind speed, and precipitation
- Genetic sequences, phylogenetic relationships, mutation rates, and gene expression
- Animal behavior, migration patterns, vocalizations, and territory sizes
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 14: Which statement best captures the small‑world property of many ecological food webs?
- Most species have few links, yet any two species are connected by a short path (correct)
- The network has a uniform degree distribution and long average path lengths
- Species form isolated clusters with no connections between groups
- Every species interacts with most others, resulting in high overall connectance
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 15: Which characteristic of a species makes its removal most likely to destabilize an ecological network?
- It has a high degree (many connections to other species) (correct)
- It occurs at low abundance in the community
- It has a specialized diet limited to few prey items
- It functions as a primary producer at the base of the food web
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 16: In quantitative food‑web studies, scaling laws are used to predict which type of relationship?
- A relationship between food‑web topology and species richness (correct)
- A relationship between predator size and prey abundance
- A relationship between climate temperature and nutrient cycling
- A relationship between genetic diversity and ecosystem productivity
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 17: What is a proposed mechanism by which compartments (modules) increase the stability of ecological networks?
- They limit the spread of disturbances between groups (correct)
- They increase overall network connectance
- They raise the average trophic level of the system
- They reduce species richness across the whole network
Food web - Quantitative Models and History Quiz Question 18: Scaling of food‑web properties means that certain metrics change predictably across ecosystems. Which set of metrics is known to exhibit this scaling behavior?
- Connectance, species richness, and average trophic level (correct)
- Biomass, primary productivity, and climate temperature
- Habitat heterogeneity, genetic diversity, and dispersal distance
- Leaf area index, soil moisture, and ambient wind speed
According to R. M. May’s theoretical work, what is a potential effect of increasing complexity in food‑web models?
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Key Concepts
Food Web Dynamics
Food web
Trophic cascade
Cross‑boundary subsidy
Network Structures
Connectance
Nestedness
Modularity (ecology)
Small‑world network
Scale‑free network
Ecological network
Biodiversity Metrics
Species richness
Definitions
Food web
A network of feeding relationships among species within an ecosystem.
Connectance
The proportion of possible trophic links that are actually realized in a food web.
Nestedness
A pattern where the diet of a specialist species is a subset of the diet of a more generalist species.
Modularity (ecology)
The division of an ecological network into compartments with dense internal interactions and sparse links between compartments.
Small‑world network
A network structure characterized by high clustering and short average path lengths, commonly observed in ecological food webs.
Scale‑free network
A network whose degree distribution follows a power‑law, featuring a few highly connected species (hubs) and many with few connections.
Trophic cascade
A top‑down ecological effect where changes in the abundance of predators cause cascading impacts on lower trophic levels.
Cross‑boundary subsidy
The transfer of organisms or nutrients across ecosystem boundaries that influences the structure and dynamics of food webs.
Species richness
The count of different species present in a given community or ecosystem.
Ecological network
A representation of biotic interactions (such as predation, mutualism, and competition) among organisms within an ecosystem.