Artículos de revistas
Can network metrics predict vulnerability and species roles in bird-dispersed plant communities? Not without behaviour
Fecha
2020-02-01Registro en:
Ecology Letters. Hoboken: Wiley, v. 23, n. 2, p. 348-358, 2020.
1461-023X
10.1111/ele.13439
WOS:000505299500014
Autor
Univ Nacl Comahue
Penn State Univ
Univ Nacl Mayor San Marcos
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Institución
Resumen
Network metrics are widely used to infer the roles of mutualistic animals in plant communities and to predict the effect of species' loss. However, their empirical validation is scarce. Here we parameterized a joint species model of frugivory and seed dispersal with bird movement and foraging data from tropical and temperate communities. With this model, we investigate the effect of frugivore loss on seed rain, and compare our predictions to those of standard coextinction models and network metrics. Topological coextinction models underestimated species loss after the removal of highly linked frugivores with unique foraging behaviours. Network metrics informed about changes in seed rain quantity after frugivore loss. However, changes in seed rain composition were only predicted by partner diversity. Nestedness, closeness, and d' specialisation could not anticipate the effects of rearrangements in plant-frugivore communities following species loss. Accounting for behavioural differences among mutualists is critical to improve predictions from network models.