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Foundation species enhance food web complexity through non-trophic facilitation

Food webs are an integral part of every ecosystem on the planet, yet understanding the mechanisms shaping these complex networks remains a major challenge. Recently, several studies suggested that non-trophic species interactions such as habitat modification and mutualisms can be important determina...

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Autores principales: Borst, Annieke C. W., Verberk, Wilco C. E. P., Angelini, Christine, Schotanus, Jildou, Wolters, Jan-Willem, Christianen, Marjolijn J. A., van der Zee, Els M., Derksen-Hooijberg, Marlous, van der Heide, Tjisse
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6118353/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30169517
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0199152
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author Borst, Annieke C. W.
Verberk, Wilco C. E. P.
Angelini, Christine
Schotanus, Jildou
Wolters, Jan-Willem
Christianen, Marjolijn J. A.
van der Zee, Els M.
Derksen-Hooijberg, Marlous
van der Heide, Tjisse
author_facet Borst, Annieke C. W.
Verberk, Wilco C. E. P.
Angelini, Christine
Schotanus, Jildou
Wolters, Jan-Willem
Christianen, Marjolijn J. A.
van der Zee, Els M.
Derksen-Hooijberg, Marlous
van der Heide, Tjisse
author_sort Borst, Annieke C. W.
collection PubMed
description Food webs are an integral part of every ecosystem on the planet, yet understanding the mechanisms shaping these complex networks remains a major challenge. Recently, several studies suggested that non-trophic species interactions such as habitat modification and mutualisms can be important determinants of food web structure. However, it remains unclear whether these findings generalize across ecosystems, and whether non-trophic interactions affect food webs randomly, or affect specific trophic levels or functional groups. Here, we combine analyses of 58 food webs from seven terrestrial, freshwater and coastal systems to test (1) the general hypothesis that non-trophic facilitation by habitat-forming foundation species enhances food web complexity, and (2) whether these enhancements have either random or targeted effects on particular trophic levels, functional groups, and linkages throughout the food web. Our empirical results demonstrate that foundation species consistently enhance food web complexity in all seven ecosystems. Further analyses reveal that 15 out of 19 food web properties can be well-approximated by assuming that foundation species randomly facilitate species throughout the trophic network. However, basal species are less strongly, and carnivores are more strongly facilitated in foundation species' food webs than predicted based on random facilitation, resulting in a higher mean trophic level and a longer average chain length. Overall, we conclude that foundation species strongly enhance food web complexity through non-trophic facilitation of species across the entire trophic network. We therefore suggest that the structure and stability of food webs often depends critically on non-trophic facilitation by foundation species.
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spelling pubmed-61183532018-09-16 Foundation species enhance food web complexity through non-trophic facilitation Borst, Annieke C. W. Verberk, Wilco C. E. P. Angelini, Christine Schotanus, Jildou Wolters, Jan-Willem Christianen, Marjolijn J. A. van der Zee, Els M. Derksen-Hooijberg, Marlous van der Heide, Tjisse PLoS One Research Article Food webs are an integral part of every ecosystem on the planet, yet understanding the mechanisms shaping these complex networks remains a major challenge. Recently, several studies suggested that non-trophic species interactions such as habitat modification and mutualisms can be important determinants of food web structure. However, it remains unclear whether these findings generalize across ecosystems, and whether non-trophic interactions affect food webs randomly, or affect specific trophic levels or functional groups. Here, we combine analyses of 58 food webs from seven terrestrial, freshwater and coastal systems to test (1) the general hypothesis that non-trophic facilitation by habitat-forming foundation species enhances food web complexity, and (2) whether these enhancements have either random or targeted effects on particular trophic levels, functional groups, and linkages throughout the food web. Our empirical results demonstrate that foundation species consistently enhance food web complexity in all seven ecosystems. Further analyses reveal that 15 out of 19 food web properties can be well-approximated by assuming that foundation species randomly facilitate species throughout the trophic network. However, basal species are less strongly, and carnivores are more strongly facilitated in foundation species' food webs than predicted based on random facilitation, resulting in a higher mean trophic level and a longer average chain length. Overall, we conclude that foundation species strongly enhance food web complexity through non-trophic facilitation of species across the entire trophic network. We therefore suggest that the structure and stability of food webs often depends critically on non-trophic facilitation by foundation species. Public Library of Science 2018-08-31 /pmc/articles/PMC6118353/ /pubmed/30169517 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0199152 Text en © 2018 Borst 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Borst, Annieke C. W.
Verberk, Wilco C. E. P.
Angelini, Christine
Schotanus, Jildou
Wolters, Jan-Willem
Christianen, Marjolijn J. A.
van der Zee, Els M.
Derksen-Hooijberg, Marlous
van der Heide, Tjisse
Foundation species enhance food web complexity through non-trophic facilitation
title Foundation species enhance food web complexity through non-trophic facilitation
title_full Foundation species enhance food web complexity through non-trophic facilitation
title_fullStr Foundation species enhance food web complexity through non-trophic facilitation
title_full_unstemmed Foundation species enhance food web complexity through non-trophic facilitation
title_short Foundation species enhance food web complexity through non-trophic facilitation
title_sort foundation species enhance food web complexity through non-trophic facilitation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6118353/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30169517
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0199152
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