Selection at the level of the community: the importance of spatial structure
Johnson, Craig R. and Boerlijst, Maarten C. (2002) Selection at the level of the community: the importance of spatial structure. Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 17 (2). pp. 83-90. ISSN 0169-5347 ![[img]](http://eprints.utas.edu.au/style/images/fileicons/application_pdf.png) | PDF - Full text restricted - Requires a PDF viewer 182Kb | |
Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0169-5347(01)02385-0 AbstractTo ask whether natural selection occurs at the level of the community is to
consider whether communities represent a major transition in evolution - can
particular community configurations evolve and maintain their integrity in the
face of disruption arising from the self-interest of component individuals? This
requires heritable variation among subcommunities in a landscape, and that
alternative subcommunities maintain a degree of individuality in both time
and space. Recently developed models show that spatial self-structuring in
multispecies systems can meet both criteria and provide a rich substrate for
community-level selection and a major transition in evolution. Repository Staff Only: item control page
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