Emergent neutrality leads to multimodal species abundance distributions

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Abstract

Recent analyses of data sampled in communities ranging from corals and fossil brachiopods to birds and phytoplankton suggest that their species abundance distributions have multiple modes, a pattern predicted by none of the existing theories. Here we show that the multimodal pattern is consistent with predictions from the theory of emergent neutrality. This adds to the observations, suggesting that natural communities may be shaped by the evolutionary emergence of groups of similar species that coexist in niches. Such self-organized similarity unifies niche and neutral theories of biodiversity. © 2012 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.

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Vergnon, R., Van Nes, E. H., & Scheffer, M. (2012). Emergent neutrality leads to multimodal species abundance distributions. Nature Communications, 3. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms1663

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