Artículos de revistas
Beyond species loss: the extinction of ecological interactions in a changing world
Fecha
2015Registro en:
Functional Ecology 2015, 29, 299–307
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2435.12356
Autor
Valiente Banuet, Alfonso
Aizen, Marcelo A.
Alcántara, Julio M.
Arroyo, Juan
Cocucci, Andrea
Galetti, Mauro
García, María B.
García, Daniel
Gómez, José M.
Jordano, Pedro
Medel Contreras, Rodrigo
Navarro, Luis
Obeso, José R.
Oviedo, Ramona
Ramírez, Nelson
Rey, Pedro J.
Traveset, Anna
Verdú, Miguel
Zamora, Regino
Institución
Resumen
1. The effects of the present biodiversity crisis have been largely focused on the loss of species.
However, a missed component of biodiversity loss that often accompanies or even precedes
species disappearance is the extinction of ecological interactions.
2. Here, we propose a novel model that (i) relates the diversity of both species and interactions
along a gradient of environmental deterioration and (ii) explores how the rate of loss of ecological
functions, and consequently of ecosystem services, can be accelerated or restrained
depending on how the rate of species loss covaries with the rate of interactions loss.
3. We find that the loss of species and interactions are decoupled, such that ecological interactions
are often lost at a higher rate. This implies that the loss of ecological interactions may
occur well before species disappearance, affecting species functionality and ecosystems services
at a faster rate than species extinctions. We provide a number of empirical case studies illustrating
these points.
4. Our approach emphasizes the importance of focusing on species interactions as the major
biodiversity component from which the ‘health’ of ecosystems depends.