Predicting trophic relations in ecological networks: a test of the allometric diet breadth model
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Publication:1783499
DOI10.1016/J.JTBI.2010.06.040zbMATH Open1397.92707arXiv0911.2021OpenAlexW2964203527WikidataQ51175006 ScholiaQ51175006MaRDI QIDQ1783499FDOQ1783499
Authors: Stefano Allesina
Publication date: 21 September 2018
Published in: Journal of Theoretical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Abstract: Few of food web theory hypotheses/predictions can be readily tested using empirical data. An exception is represented by simple probabilistic models for food web structure, for which the likelihood has been derived. Here I test the performance of a more complex model for food web structure that is grounded in the allometric scaling of interactions with body size and the theory of optimal foraging (Allometric Diet Breadth Model - ADBM). This deterministic model has been evaluated measuring the fraction of trophic relations correctly predicted. I contrast this value with that produced by simpler models based on body sizes and find that the data does not favor the more complex model: the information on allometric scaling and optimal foraging does not significantly increase the fit to the data. Also, I take a different approach and compute the p-value for the fraction of trophic interactions correctly predicted by ADBM with respect to three probabilistic null models. I find that the ADBM is clearly better at predicting links than random graphs, but other models can do even better. Although optimal foraging and allometric scaling could improve our understanding of food webs, the models need to be ameliorated to find support in the data.
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/0911.2021
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Cites Work
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- A statistical social network model for consumption data in trophic food webs
- A new dimension: evolutionary food web dynamics in two dimensional trait space
- Degree of intervality of food webs: from body-size data to models
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- Estimating trophic link density from quantitative but incomplete diet data
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