科研成果

2019
Wang S, Brose U GD. Intraguild predation enhances biodiversity and functioning in complex food webs. Ecology [Internet]. 2019;e02616. 访问链接Abstract
Intraguild predation (IGP), i.e. feeding interaction between two consumers that share the same resource species, is commonly observed in natural food webs. IGP expands vertical niche space and slows down energy flows from lower to higher trophic levels, which potentially affects the diversity and dynamics of food webs. Here, we use food web models to investigate the effects of IGP on species diversity and ecosystem functioning. We first simulate a five‐species food web module with different strengths of IGP at the herbivore and/or carnivore level. Results show that as the strength of IGP within a trophic level increases, the biomass of its resource level increases because of predation release; this increased biomass in turn alters the energy fluxes and biomass of other trophic levels. These results are then extended by subsequent simulations of more diverse food webs. As the strength of IGP increases, simulated food webs maintain (1) higher species diversity at different trophic levels, (2) higher total biomasses at different trophic levels, and (3) larger energy fluxes across trophic levels. Our results challenge the intuitive hypothesis that food web structure should maximize the efficiency of energy transfer across trophic levels; instead, they suggest that the assembly of food webs should be governed by a balance between efficiency (of energy transfer) and persistence (i.e. the maintenance of species and biomasses). Our simulations also show that the relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning (e.g. total biomass or primary production) is much stronger in the presence of IGP, reconciling the contrast from recent studies based on food‐chain and food‐web models. Our findings shed new light on the functional role of IGP and contribute to resolving the debate on structure, diversity and functioning in complex food webs. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
2018
Wang* S. Biodiversity and ecosystem functioning in food webs: the vertical diversity hypothesis. Ecology Letters [Internet]. 2018;21(1):9-20. 访问链接Abstract
One challenge in merging community and ecosystem ecology is to integrate the complexity of natural multitrophic communities into concepts of ecosystem functioning. Here, we combine food‐web and allometry theories to demonstrate that primary production, as measured by the total nutrient uptake of the multitrophic community, is determined by vertical diversity (i.e. food web's maximum trophic level) and structure (i.e. distributions of species and their abundances and metabolic rates across trophic levels). In natural ecosystems, the community size distribution determines all these vertical patterns and thus the total nutrient uptake. Our model suggests a vertical diversity hypothesis (VDH) for ecosystem functioning in complex food webs. It predicts that, under a given nutrient supply, the total nutrient uptake increases exponentially with the maximum trophic level in the food web and it increases with its maximum body size according to a power law. The VDH highlights the effect of top–down regulation on plant nutrient uptake, which complements traditional paradigms that emphasised the bottom–up effect of nutrient supply on vertical diversity. We conclude that the VDH contributes to a synthetic framework for understanding the relationship between vertical diversity and ecosystem functioning in food webs and predicting the impacts of global changes on multitrophic ecosystems.
Wang* S. Simplicity from complex interactions. Nature Ecology & Evolution (News & Views - Invited) [Internet]. 2018;2:1201-1202. 访问链接Abstract
Several recent theoretical studies develop tools to predict species diversity in large model ecosystems, setting a new benchmark for understanding the mechanism of species coexistence in natural ecosystems.
2017
de Wang S*, Loreau M AJFFRTMJKSC. An Invariability-Area Relationship sheds new light on the spatial scaling of ecological stability. Nature Communications [Internet]. 2017;8:15211. 访问链接Abstract
The spatial scaling of stability is key to understanding ecological sustainability across scales and the sensitivity of ecosystems to habitat destruction. Here we propose the invariability–area relationship (IAR) as a novel approach to investigate the spatial scaling of stability. The shape and slope of IAR are largely determined by patterns of spatial synchrony across scales. When synchrony decays exponentially with distance, IARs exhibit three phases, characterized by steeper increases in invariability at both small and large scales. Such triphasic IARs are observed for primary productivity from plot to continental scales. When synchrony decays as a power law with distance, IARs are quasilinear on a log–log scale. Such quasilinear IARs are observed for North American bird biomass at both species and community levels. The IAR provides a quantitative tool to predict the effects of habitat loss on population and ecosystem stability and to detect regime shifts in spatial ecological systems, which are goals of relevance to conservation and policy.
2016
Wang S* LM. Biodiversity and ecosystem stability across scales in metacommunities. Ecology Letters [Internet]. 2016;19:510-518. 访问链接Abstract
Although diversity–stability relationships have been extensively studied in local ecosystems, the global biodiversity crisis calls for an improved understanding of these relationships in a spatial context. Here, we use a dynamical model of competitive metacommunities to study the relationships between species diversity and ecosystem variability across scales. We derive analytic relationships under a limiting case; these results are extended to more general cases with numerical simulations. Our model shows that, while alpha diversity decreases local ecosystem variability, beta diversity generally contributes to increasing spatial asynchrony among local ecosystems. Consequently, both alpha and beta diversity provide stabilising effects for regional ecosystems, through local and spatial insurance effects respectively. We further show that at the regional scale, the stabilising effect of biodiversity increases as spatial environmental correlation increases. Our findings have important implications for understanding the interactive effects of global environmental changes (e.g. environmental homogenisation) and biodiversity loss on ecosystem sustainability at large scales.
2015
Wang S*, Chen A PFSJ. Abundance dependent speciation rate alters the behaviors of neutral communities. Journal of Theoretical Biology. 2015;372:128-134.
de Roissart A, Wang S BD*. Spatial and spatiotemporal variation in metapopulation structure affects population dynamics in a passively dispersing arthropod. Journal of Animal Ecology. 2015;84:1565-1574.
2014
Wang S* LM. Ecosystem stability in space: α, β and γ variability. Ecology Letters. 2014;17:891-901.
2013
Wang S*, Chen A FPSWJ. Speciation rates decline through time in individual-based models of speciation and extinction. The American Naturalist. 2013;82(3):Speciation rates decline through time in individual-based models of speciation and extinction.
Wang S, Chen A FPSW*J. Why abundant tropical tree species are phylogenetically old? . Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2013;110:16039-16043.