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Seed-dispersal networks in tropical forest fragments: area effects, remnant species, and interaction...

Seed-dispersal networks in tropical forest fragments: area effects, remnant species, and interaction...

https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_proquest_journals_2257448947

Seed-dispersal networks in tropical forest fragments: area effects, remnant species, and interaction diversity

About this item

Full title

Seed-dispersal networks in tropical forest fragments: area effects, remnant species, and interaction diversity

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press

Journal title

bioRxiv, 2019-10

Language

English

Formats

Publication information

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press

More information

Scope and Contents

Contents

Seed dispersal interactions involve key ecological processes in tropical forests that help to maintain ecosystem functioning. Yet this functionality may be threatened by increasing habitat loss, defaunation and fragmentation. However, generalist species, and their interactions, can benefit from the habitat change caused by human disturbance while more specialized interactions mostly disappear. Therefore changes in the structure of the local, within fragment, networks can be expected. Here we investigated how the structure of seed-dispersal networks changes along a gradient of increasing habitat fragmentation. We analysed 16 bird seed-dispersal assemblages from forest fragments of a biodiversity-rich ecosystem. We found significant species-, interaction- and network-area relationships, yet the later was determined by the number of species remaining in each community. The number of frugivorous bird and plant species, their interactions, and the number of links per species decreases as area is lost in the fragmented landscape. In contrast, network nestedness has a negative relationship with fragment area, suggesting an increasing generalization of the network structure in the gradient of fragmentation. Network specialization was not significantly affected by area, indicating that some network properties may be invariant to disturbance. Still, the local extinction of partner species, paralleled by a loss of interactions and specialist-specialist bird-plant seed dispersal associations suggests the functional homogenization of the system as area is lost. Our study provides empirical evidence for network-area relationships driven by the presence/absence of remnant species and the interactions they perform. Footnotes * This new version has new analyses for the network metrics, which resulted in a bit different discussion. The overall message is the same though. * https://github.com/carineemer/network_area...

Alternative Titles

Full title

Seed-dispersal networks in tropical forest fragments: area effects, remnant species, and interaction diversity

Identifiers

Primary Identifiers

Record Identifier

TN_cdi_proquest_journals_2257448947

Permalink

https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_proquest_journals_2257448947

Other Identifiers

E-ISSN

2692-8205

DOI

10.1101/701730