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The Missing Part of Seed Dispersal Networks: Structure and Robustness of Bat-Fruit Interactions

Mutualistic networks are crucial to the maintenance of ecosystem services. Unfortunately, what we know about seed dispersal networks is based only on bird-fruit interactions. Therefore, we aimed at filling part of this gap by investigating bat-fruit networks. It is known from population studies that...

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Autores principales: Mello, Marco Aurelio Ribeiro, Marquitti, Flávia Maria Darcie, Guimarães, Paulo Roberto, Kalko, Elisabeth Klara Viktoria, Jordano, Pedro, de Aguiar, Marcus Aloizio Martinez
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3046224/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21386981
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0017395
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author Mello, Marco Aurelio Ribeiro
Marquitti, Flávia Maria Darcie
Guimarães, Paulo Roberto
Kalko, Elisabeth Klara Viktoria
Jordano, Pedro
de Aguiar, Marcus Aloizio Martinez
author_facet Mello, Marco Aurelio Ribeiro
Marquitti, Flávia Maria Darcie
Guimarães, Paulo Roberto
Kalko, Elisabeth Klara Viktoria
Jordano, Pedro
de Aguiar, Marcus Aloizio Martinez
author_sort Mello, Marco Aurelio Ribeiro
collection PubMed
description Mutualistic networks are crucial to the maintenance of ecosystem services. Unfortunately, what we know about seed dispersal networks is based only on bird-fruit interactions. Therefore, we aimed at filling part of this gap by investigating bat-fruit networks. It is known from population studies that: (i) some bat species depend more on fruits than others, and (ii) that some specialized frugivorous bats prefer particular plant genera. We tested whether those preferences affected the structure and robustness of the whole network and the functional roles of species. Nine bat-fruit datasets from the literature were analyzed and all networks showed lower complementary specialization (H(2)' = 0.37±0.10, mean ± SD) and similar nestedness (NODF = 0.56±0.12) than pollination networks. All networks were modular (M = 0.32±0.07), and had on average four cohesive subgroups (modules) of tightly connected bats and plants. The composition of those modules followed the genus-genus associations observed at population level (Artibeus-Ficus, Carollia-Piper, and Sturnira-Solanum), although a few of those plant genera were dispersed also by other bats. Bat-fruit networks showed high robustness to simulated cumulative removals of both bats (R = 0.55±0.10) and plants (R = 0.68±0.09). Primary frugivores interacted with a larger proportion of the plants available and also occupied more central positions; furthermore, their extinction caused larger changes in network structure. We conclude that bat-fruit networks are highly cohesive and robust mutualistic systems, in which redundancy is high within modules, although modules are complementary to each other. Dietary specialization seems to be an important structuring factor that affects the topology, the guild structure and functional roles in bat-fruit networks.
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spelling pubmed-30462242011-03-08 The Missing Part of Seed Dispersal Networks: Structure and Robustness of Bat-Fruit Interactions Mello, Marco Aurelio Ribeiro Marquitti, Flávia Maria Darcie Guimarães, Paulo Roberto Kalko, Elisabeth Klara Viktoria Jordano, Pedro de Aguiar, Marcus Aloizio Martinez PLoS One Research Article Mutualistic networks are crucial to the maintenance of ecosystem services. Unfortunately, what we know about seed dispersal networks is based only on bird-fruit interactions. Therefore, we aimed at filling part of this gap by investigating bat-fruit networks. It is known from population studies that: (i) some bat species depend more on fruits than others, and (ii) that some specialized frugivorous bats prefer particular plant genera. We tested whether those preferences affected the structure and robustness of the whole network and the functional roles of species. Nine bat-fruit datasets from the literature were analyzed and all networks showed lower complementary specialization (H(2)' = 0.37±0.10, mean ± SD) and similar nestedness (NODF = 0.56±0.12) than pollination networks. All networks were modular (M = 0.32±0.07), and had on average four cohesive subgroups (modules) of tightly connected bats and plants. The composition of those modules followed the genus-genus associations observed at population level (Artibeus-Ficus, Carollia-Piper, and Sturnira-Solanum), although a few of those plant genera were dispersed also by other bats. Bat-fruit networks showed high robustness to simulated cumulative removals of both bats (R = 0.55±0.10) and plants (R = 0.68±0.09). Primary frugivores interacted with a larger proportion of the plants available and also occupied more central positions; furthermore, their extinction caused larger changes in network structure. We conclude that bat-fruit networks are highly cohesive and robust mutualistic systems, in which redundancy is high within modules, although modules are complementary to each other. Dietary specialization seems to be an important structuring factor that affects the topology, the guild structure and functional roles in bat-fruit networks. Public Library of Science 2011-02-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3046224/ /pubmed/21386981 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0017395 Text en Mello 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
Mello, Marco Aurelio Ribeiro
Marquitti, Flávia Maria Darcie
Guimarães, Paulo Roberto
Kalko, Elisabeth Klara Viktoria
Jordano, Pedro
de Aguiar, Marcus Aloizio Martinez
The Missing Part of Seed Dispersal Networks: Structure and Robustness of Bat-Fruit Interactions
title The Missing Part of Seed Dispersal Networks: Structure and Robustness of Bat-Fruit Interactions
title_full The Missing Part of Seed Dispersal Networks: Structure and Robustness of Bat-Fruit Interactions
title_fullStr The Missing Part of Seed Dispersal Networks: Structure and Robustness of Bat-Fruit Interactions
title_full_unstemmed The Missing Part of Seed Dispersal Networks: Structure and Robustness of Bat-Fruit Interactions
title_short The Missing Part of Seed Dispersal Networks: Structure and Robustness of Bat-Fruit Interactions
title_sort missing part of seed dispersal networks: structure and robustness of bat-fruit interactions
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3046224/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21386981
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0017395
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