Abstract
The coexistence of obligate mutualists is often precariously close to tipping points where small environmental changes can drive catastrophic shifts in species composition. For example, microbial ecosystems can collapse by the decline of a strain that provides an essential resource on which other strains cross-feed. Here, we show that tipping points, ecosystem collapse, bistability and hysteresis arise even with very weak (non-obligate) mutualism provided the population is spatially structured. Based on numeric solutions of a metacommunity model and mean-field analyses, we demonstrate that weak mutualism lowers the minimal dispersal rate necessary to avoid stochastic extinction, while species need to overcome a mean threshold density to survive in this low dispersal rate regime. Moreover, we show that, starting with a randomly interacting species pool, metapopulation structure tends to select for an ecosystem with mutualistic interactions. Bistable metacommunities could, therefore, be a natural outcome of evolutionary dynamics in structured ecosystems.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.