Seed‐dispersal networks are more specialized in the Neotropics than in the Afrotropics
Date
2019-01-03Author
Dugger, Phillip James
Blendinger, Pedro Gerardo
Böhning-Gaese, Katrin
Chama, Lackson
Correia, Marta
Dehling, D. Matthias
Emer, Carine
Farwig, Nina
Fricke, Evan C.
Galetti, Mauro
García, Daniel
Grass, Ingo
Heleno, Ruben
Jacomassa, Fábio André Facco
Moraes, Suelen
Moran, Catherine
Muñoz, Marcia Carolina
Neuschulz, Eike Lena
Nowak, Larissa
Piratelli, Augusto
Pizo, Marco Aurelio
Quitián, Marta
Rogers, Haldre S.
Ruggera, Román A.
Saavedra, Francisco
Sánchez, Mariano Sebastián
Sánchez, Rocío
Santillán, Vinicio
Schabo, Dana G.
Ribeiro da Silva, Fernanda
Timóteo, Sérgio
Traveset, Anna
Vollstädt, Maximilian GR
Schleuning, Matthias
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Show full item recordAbstract
Aim: Biogeographical comparisons of interaction networks help to elucidate diffeences in ecological communities and ecosystem functioning at large scales.
Neotropical ecosystems have higher diversity and a different composition of frugivores and fleshy‐fruited plants compared with Afrotropical systems, but a lack of intercontinental comparisons limits understanding of (a) whether plant–frugivore networks are structured in a similar manner, and (b) whether the same species traits define the roles of animals across continents.
Location: Afrotropics and Neotropics.
Time period: 1977–2015.
Taxa: Fleshy‐fruited plants and frugivorous vertebrates.
Methods: We compiled a dataset comprising 17 Afrotropical and 48 Neotropical weighted seed‐dispersal networks quantifying frugivory interactions between 1,091
fleshy‐fruited plant and 665 animal species, comprising in total 8,251 interaction links between plants and animals. In addition, we compiled information on the body mass of animals and their degree of frugivory. We compared four standard network level metrics related to interaction diversity and specialization, accounting for differences related to sampling effort and network location. Furthermore, we tested whether animal traits (body mass, degree of frugivory) differed between continents, whether these traits were related to the network roles of species and whether these relation ships varied between continents.
Results: We found significant structural differences in networks between continents.
Overall, Neotropical networkswere less nested and more specialized tan Afrotropical networks. At the species level, a higher body mass and degree of frugivory were as sociated with an increasing diversity of plant partners. Specialization of frugivores increased with the degree of frugivory, but only in the Neotropics.
Main conclusions: Our findings show that Afrotropical networks have a greater overlap in plant partners among vertebrate frugivores than the more diverse networks in the Neotropics that are characterized by a greater niche partitioning. Hence, the loss of frugivore species could have stronger impacts on ecosystem functioning in the more specialized Neotropical communities compared with the more generalized Afrotropical communities.
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