Interaction strength in plant-pollinator networks: Are we using the right measure?

Understanding how ecological networks are assembled is important because network structure reflects ecosystem functioning and stability. Quantitative network analysis incorporates measures of interaction strength as an estimate of the magnitude of the effect of interaction partners on one another. M...

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Main Authors: Roberto Novella-Fernandez, Anselm Rodrigo, Xavier Arnan, Jordi Bosch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225930
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spelling doaj-4425dde501154f79aac23e63378a8a2d2021-03-03T21:19:05ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-011412e022593010.1371/journal.pone.0225930Interaction strength in plant-pollinator networks: Are we using the right measure?Roberto Novella-FernandezAnselm RodrigoXavier ArnanJordi BoschUnderstanding how ecological networks are assembled is important because network structure reflects ecosystem functioning and stability. Quantitative network analysis incorporates measures of interaction strength as an estimate of the magnitude of the effect of interaction partners on one another. Most plant-pollinator network studies use frequency of interaction between individual pollinators and individual plants (encounter) as a surrogate of interaction strength. However, the number of flowers visited per encounter may strongly vary among pollinator and plant species, and therefore not all encounters are quantitatively equivalent. We sampled plant-pollinator interactions in a Mediterranean scrubland and tested whether using a measure of interaction strength based on the number of flowers visited resulted in changes in species (species strength, interaction species asymmetry, specialization) and network descriptors (nestedness, H2', interaction evenness, plant generality, pollinator generality) compared to the encounter-based measure. Several species (including some of the most abundant ones) showed important changes in species descriptors, notably in specialization. These changes were especially important in plant species with large floral displays, which became less specialized with the visit-based measure of interaction strength. At the network level we found significant changes in all properties analysed. With the encounter-based approach plant generality was much higher than pollinator generality (high specialization asymmetry between trophic levels). However, with the visit-based approach plant generality was greatly reduced so that plants and pollinators had similar levels of generalization. Interaction evenness also decreased strongly with the visit-based approach. We conclude that accounting for the number of flowers visited per encounter provides a more ecologically relevant measure of interaction strength. Our results have important implications for the stability of pollination networks and the evolution of plant-pollinator interactions. The use of a visit-based approach is especially important in studies relating interaction network structure and ecosystem function (pollination and/or exploitation of floral resources).https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225930
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roberto Novella-Fernandez
Anselm Rodrigo
Xavier Arnan
Jordi Bosch
spellingShingle Roberto Novella-Fernandez
Anselm Rodrigo
Xavier Arnan
Jordi Bosch
Interaction strength in plant-pollinator networks: Are we using the right measure?
PLoS ONE
author_facet Roberto Novella-Fernandez
Anselm Rodrigo
Xavier Arnan
Jordi Bosch
author_sort Roberto Novella-Fernandez
title Interaction strength in plant-pollinator networks: Are we using the right measure?
title_short Interaction strength in plant-pollinator networks: Are we using the right measure?
title_full Interaction strength in plant-pollinator networks: Are we using the right measure?
title_fullStr Interaction strength in plant-pollinator networks: Are we using the right measure?
title_full_unstemmed Interaction strength in plant-pollinator networks: Are we using the right measure?
title_sort interaction strength in plant-pollinator networks: are we using the right measure?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Understanding how ecological networks are assembled is important because network structure reflects ecosystem functioning and stability. Quantitative network analysis incorporates measures of interaction strength as an estimate of the magnitude of the effect of interaction partners on one another. Most plant-pollinator network studies use frequency of interaction between individual pollinators and individual plants (encounter) as a surrogate of interaction strength. However, the number of flowers visited per encounter may strongly vary among pollinator and plant species, and therefore not all encounters are quantitatively equivalent. We sampled plant-pollinator interactions in a Mediterranean scrubland and tested whether using a measure of interaction strength based on the number of flowers visited resulted in changes in species (species strength, interaction species asymmetry, specialization) and network descriptors (nestedness, H2', interaction evenness, plant generality, pollinator generality) compared to the encounter-based measure. Several species (including some of the most abundant ones) showed important changes in species descriptors, notably in specialization. These changes were especially important in plant species with large floral displays, which became less specialized with the visit-based measure of interaction strength. At the network level we found significant changes in all properties analysed. With the encounter-based approach plant generality was much higher than pollinator generality (high specialization asymmetry between trophic levels). However, with the visit-based approach plant generality was greatly reduced so that plants and pollinators had similar levels of generalization. Interaction evenness also decreased strongly with the visit-based approach. We conclude that accounting for the number of flowers visited per encounter provides a more ecologically relevant measure of interaction strength. Our results have important implications for the stability of pollination networks and the evolution of plant-pollinator interactions. The use of a visit-based approach is especially important in studies relating interaction network structure and ecosystem function (pollination and/or exploitation of floral resources).
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225930
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