Database of Quantified Food Webs

Biodiversity patterns in natural ecosystems are dynamically sustained by food webs, describing the feeding relations among all ecosystem compartments, including the involved animal and plants.

© udaix | Shutterstock

© udaix | Shutterstock

While traditional descriptions of such relations have been restricted to information on the presence or absence of feeding links between compartments (binary food webs), modern descriptions have strived to add information on the quantitative flows of energy or material along such links (quantified food webs). The Advanced Systems Analysis Program and Evolution and Ecology Program are currently compiling the largest database of quantified food webs available internationally, which will comprise detailed information on feeding relations in more than 100 ecosystems. Models calibrated using this database will facilitate identifying general patterns of ecosystem resilience in response to anthropogenic threats.

Reference:

Veshchinskaya V, Brännström Å, Rovenskaya E, & Dieckmann U (2012). Ecosystem vulnerability to species loss. In: Worlds Within Reach: From Science To Policy – IIASA 40th Anniversary Conference, 24-26 October 2012, Hofburg Congress Center, Vienna and IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria.



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Last edited: 21 January 2019

CONTACT DETAILS

Elena Rovenskaya

Program Director and Principal Research Scholar Advancing Systems Analysis Program

Darina Zlatanova

Program and Project Officer Advancing Systems Analysis Program

Program and Project Officer Cooperation and Transformative Governance Research Group - Advancing Systems Analysis Program

International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)
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