Responses heterogeneity under multiple stressors narrowed by
interspecific interactions, in turn enhancing its shift threshold
- Shuhan Li,
- Man Qi,
- Haiying Lin,
- Wei Yang,
- Tao Sun
Abstract
Variations in interspecific interactions play an essential role in
community structure, and have already been widely demonstrated between
pairwise species along a stress gradient. However, little is known about
how the responses of multiple species affect interspecific interactions
and the coexistence of multiple stressors. Here, we developed a dynamic
model considering the tolerance heterogeneity of three species to
investigate how interspecific interactions shift across different
environmental stressors. We found the alteration of interspecific
relationships for multiple species under multiple stressors depends on
the tradeoffs between tolerant and competitive abilities to the limiting
stress. Stress--intolerant species may be significantly improved by
positive feedback effects from two or more neighbors under multiple
stressors. There are complementary effects of species' heterogeneous
responses under multiple stressors due to environmental feedback from
different species, which may enhance interspecific interaction strength
and the shift threshold from competition to facilitation.