What determines the temporal changes of species degree and strength in an oceanic island plant-disperser network?

Network models of frugivory and seed dispersal are usually static. To date, most studies on mutualistic networks assert that interaction properties such as species' degree (k) and strength (s) are strongly influenced by species abundances. We evaluated how species' degree and strength chan...

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Main Authors: Aarón González-Castro, Suann Yang, Manuel Nogales, Tomás A Carlo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3402460?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-e2ccf3068c374ba9ae97dd29375fe03e2020-11-25T00:11:44ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0177e4138510.1371/journal.pone.0041385What determines the temporal changes of species degree and strength in an oceanic island plant-disperser network?Aarón González-CastroSuann YangManuel NogalesTomás A CarloNetwork models of frugivory and seed dispersal are usually static. To date, most studies on mutualistic networks assert that interaction properties such as species' degree (k) and strength (s) are strongly influenced by species abundances. We evaluated how species' degree and strength change as a function of temporal variation not only in species abundance, but also in species persistence (i.e., phenology length). In a two-year study, we collected community-wide data on seed dispersal by birds and examined the seasonal dynamics of the above-mentioned interaction properties. Our analyses revealed that species abundance is an important predictor for plant strength within a given sub-network. However, our analyses also reveal that species' degree can often be best explained by the length of fruiting phenology (for plants degree) or by the number of fruiting species (for dispersers degree), which are factors that can be decoupled from the relative abundance of the species participating in the network. Moreover, our results suggest that generalist dispersers (when total study period is considered) act as temporal generalists, with degree constrained by the number of plant species displaying fruits in each span. Along with species identity, our findings underscore the need for a temporal perspective, given that seasonality is an inherent property of many mutualistic networks.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3402460?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aarón González-Castro
Suann Yang
Manuel Nogales
Tomás A Carlo
spellingShingle Aarón González-Castro
Suann Yang
Manuel Nogales
Tomás A Carlo
What determines the temporal changes of species degree and strength in an oceanic island plant-disperser network?
PLoS ONE
author_facet Aarón González-Castro
Suann Yang
Manuel Nogales
Tomás A Carlo
author_sort Aarón González-Castro
title What determines the temporal changes of species degree and strength in an oceanic island plant-disperser network?
title_short What determines the temporal changes of species degree and strength in an oceanic island plant-disperser network?
title_full What determines the temporal changes of species degree and strength in an oceanic island plant-disperser network?
title_fullStr What determines the temporal changes of species degree and strength in an oceanic island plant-disperser network?
title_full_unstemmed What determines the temporal changes of species degree and strength in an oceanic island plant-disperser network?
title_sort what determines the temporal changes of species degree and strength in an oceanic island plant-disperser network?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Network models of frugivory and seed dispersal are usually static. To date, most studies on mutualistic networks assert that interaction properties such as species' degree (k) and strength (s) are strongly influenced by species abundances. We evaluated how species' degree and strength change as a function of temporal variation not only in species abundance, but also in species persistence (i.e., phenology length). In a two-year study, we collected community-wide data on seed dispersal by birds and examined the seasonal dynamics of the above-mentioned interaction properties. Our analyses revealed that species abundance is an important predictor for plant strength within a given sub-network. However, our analyses also reveal that species' degree can often be best explained by the length of fruiting phenology (for plants degree) or by the number of fruiting species (for dispersers degree), which are factors that can be decoupled from the relative abundance of the species participating in the network. Moreover, our results suggest that generalist dispersers (when total study period is considered) act as temporal generalists, with degree constrained by the number of plant species displaying fruits in each span. Along with species identity, our findings underscore the need for a temporal perspective, given that seasonality is an inherent property of many mutualistic networks.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3402460?pdf=render
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