Published April 27, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

What constitutes a community? A co-occurrence exploration of the Costa Rican avifauna

  • 1. University of Chicago
  • 2. University of Oklahoma
  • 3. University of British Columbia
  • 4. State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry
  • 5. Ohio State University
  • 6. Universidad EAFIT
  • 7. BirdsCaribbean
  • 8. Negaunee Integrative Research Center

Description

The concept of a "community" as a form of organization for natural biological systems is both widespread and widely accepted within the ecological and biological sciences. Communities have been defined as groups of organisms that interact in ways that denote interdependence between individuals and taxa (e.g. as defined by "food webs") but they have also been defined as groups of co-occurring organisms that are assumed to interact by virtue of their shared spatiotemporal existence. The latter definition has been debated and challenged in the literature, with mounting evidence for co-occurrence being more indicative of coincident ecological niches in space and time rather than being evidence of ecological interaction or dependency. Using a dataset of 460 Costa Rican bird species divided into breeding and non-breeding season datasets, we empirically demonstrate the ways in which co-occurrence can create illusory communities based on similar occupied ecological niches and similar patterns of co-occurrence at different times of year. We discuss the importance of discerning coincidental co-occurrence from true ecological interactions that would manifest a true community, and further address the importance of differentiating communities of co-occurrence from communities of demonstrable ecological interaction. While co-occurrence is a necessary aspect of interspecific interactions, we discuss and demonstrate here that such co-occurrence does not make a community, nor should explicit patterns of co-occurrence be seen as evidence for evolutionarily important ecological interactions.

Data availability

Our code files have been uploaded to Github and are available at https://github.com/jacobccooper/costa_rica_community

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What-constitutes-a-community.pdf

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1080/23766808.2023.2204549
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:5863

Funding

University of Chicago
Committee on Evolutionary Biology
National Institutes of Health
2K12GM063651
University of British Columbia
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
CGS-M program

UChicago Information

Division(s)
The College
Department(s)
Biological Sciences