Under most natural marine conditions, phytoplankton cells suspended in the water column are too distantly spaced for direct competition for resources (i.e., overlapping cell boundary layers) to be a routine occurrence. Accordingly, resource-based competitive exclusion should be rare. In contrast, contemporary ecosystem models typically predict an exclusion of larger phytoplankton size classes under low-nutrient conditions, an outcome interpreted as reflecting the competitive advantage of small cells having much higher nutrient 'affinities' than larger cells. Here, we develop mechanistically-focused expressions for steady-state, nutrient-limited phytoplankton growth that are consistent with the discrete, distantly-spaced cells of natural populations. These expressions, when encompassed in a phytoplanktonzooplankton model, yield sustained diversity across all size classes over the full range in nutrient concentrations observed in the ocean. In other words, our model does not exhibit resource-based competitive exclusion between size classes previously associated with size-dependent differences in nutrient 'affinities'.
CITATION STYLE
Behrenfeld, M. J., Bisson, K. M., Boss, E., Gaube, P., & Karp-Boss, L. (2022). Phytoplankton community structuring in the absence of resource-based competitive exclusion. PLoS ONE, 17(9 Septamber). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0274183
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