What can ecosystems learn? Expanding evolutionary ecology with learning theory

Power, Daniel A., Richard A. Watson, Eörs Szathmáry, Rob Mills, Simon T. Powers, C. Patrick Doncaster, and BłaŻej Czapp. “What can ecosystems learn? Expanding evolutionary ecology with learning theory.” Biology direct 10, no. 1 (2015): 1-24.
URL1 URL2

The structure and organisation of ecological interactions within an ecosystem is modified by the evolution and coevolution of the individual species it contains. Understanding how historical conditions have shaped this architecture is vital for understanding system responses to change at scales from the microbial upwards. However, in the absence of a group selection process, the collective behaviours and ecosystem functions exhibited by the whole community cannot be organised or adapted in a Darwinian sense. A long-standing open question thus persists: Are there alternative organising principles that enable us to understand and predict how the coevolution of the component species creates and maintains complex collective behaviours exhibited by the ecosystem as a whole?

Cited by 29
Related articles