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Compilation and Network Analyses of Cambrian Food Webs

A rich body of empirically grounded theory has developed about food webs—the networks of feeding relationships among species within habitats. However, detailed food-web data and analyses are lacking for ancient ecosystems, largely because of the low resolution of taxa coupled with uncertain and inco...

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Autores principales: Dunne, Jennifer A, Williams, Richard J, Martinez, Neo D, Wood, Rachel A, Erwin, Douglas H
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2689700/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18447582
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0060102
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author Dunne, Jennifer A
Williams, Richard J
Martinez, Neo D
Wood, Rachel A
Erwin, Douglas H
author_facet Dunne, Jennifer A
Williams, Richard J
Martinez, Neo D
Wood, Rachel A
Erwin, Douglas H
author_sort Dunne, Jennifer A
collection PubMed
description A rich body of empirically grounded theory has developed about food webs—the networks of feeding relationships among species within habitats. However, detailed food-web data and analyses are lacking for ancient ecosystems, largely because of the low resolution of taxa coupled with uncertain and incomplete information about feeding interactions. These impediments appear insurmountable for most fossil assemblages; however, a few assemblages with excellent soft-body preservation across trophic levels are candidates for food-web data compilation and topological analysis. Here we present plausible, detailed food webs for the Chengjiang and Burgess Shale assemblages from the Cambrian Period. Analyses of degree distributions and other structural network properties, including sensitivity analyses of the effects of uncertainty associated with Cambrian diet designations, suggest that these early Paleozoic communities share remarkably similar topology with modern food webs. Observed regularities reflect a systematic dependence of structure on the numbers of taxa and links in a web. Most aspects of Cambrian food-web structure are well-characterized by a simple “niche model,” which was developed for modern food webs and takes into account this scale dependence. However, a few aspects of topology differ between the ancient and recent webs: longer path lengths between species and more species in feeding loops in the earlier Chengjiang web, and higher variability in the number of links per species for both Cambrian webs. Our results are relatively insensitive to the exclusion of low-certainty or random links. The many similarities between Cambrian and recent food webs point toward surprisingly strong and enduring constraints on the organization of complex feeding interactions among metazoan species. The few differences could reflect a transition to more strongly integrated and constrained trophic organization within ecosystems following the rapid diversification of species, body plans, and trophic roles during the Cambrian radiation. More research is needed to explore the generality of food-web structure through deep time and across habitats, especially to investigate potential mechanisms that could give rise to similar structure, as well as any differences.
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spelling pubmed-26897002009-06-02 Compilation and Network Analyses of Cambrian Food Webs Dunne, Jennifer A Williams, Richard J Martinez, Neo D Wood, Rachel A Erwin, Douglas H PLoS Biol Research Article A rich body of empirically grounded theory has developed about food webs—the networks of feeding relationships among species within habitats. However, detailed food-web data and analyses are lacking for ancient ecosystems, largely because of the low resolution of taxa coupled with uncertain and incomplete information about feeding interactions. These impediments appear insurmountable for most fossil assemblages; however, a few assemblages with excellent soft-body preservation across trophic levels are candidates for food-web data compilation and topological analysis. Here we present plausible, detailed food webs for the Chengjiang and Burgess Shale assemblages from the Cambrian Period. Analyses of degree distributions and other structural network properties, including sensitivity analyses of the effects of uncertainty associated with Cambrian diet designations, suggest that these early Paleozoic communities share remarkably similar topology with modern food webs. Observed regularities reflect a systematic dependence of structure on the numbers of taxa and links in a web. Most aspects of Cambrian food-web structure are well-characterized by a simple “niche model,” which was developed for modern food webs and takes into account this scale dependence. However, a few aspects of topology differ between the ancient and recent webs: longer path lengths between species and more species in feeding loops in the earlier Chengjiang web, and higher variability in the number of links per species for both Cambrian webs. Our results are relatively insensitive to the exclusion of low-certainty or random links. The many similarities between Cambrian and recent food webs point toward surprisingly strong and enduring constraints on the organization of complex feeding interactions among metazoan species. The few differences could reflect a transition to more strongly integrated and constrained trophic organization within ecosystems following the rapid diversification of species, body plans, and trophic roles during the Cambrian radiation. More research is needed to explore the generality of food-web structure through deep time and across habitats, especially to investigate potential mechanisms that could give rise to similar structure, as well as any differences. Public Library of Science 2008-04 2008-04-29 /pmc/articles/PMC2689700/ /pubmed/18447582 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0060102 Text en © 2008 Dunne et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dunne, Jennifer A
Williams, Richard J
Martinez, Neo D
Wood, Rachel A
Erwin, Douglas H
Compilation and Network Analyses of Cambrian Food Webs
title Compilation and Network Analyses of Cambrian Food Webs
title_full Compilation and Network Analyses of Cambrian Food Webs
title_fullStr Compilation and Network Analyses of Cambrian Food Webs
title_full_unstemmed Compilation and Network Analyses of Cambrian Food Webs
title_short Compilation and Network Analyses of Cambrian Food Webs
title_sort compilation and network analyses of cambrian food webs
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2689700/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18447582
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0060102
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