4.4 Article

Modularity and specialization in bat-fly interaction networks are remarkably consistent across patches within urbanized landscapes and spatial scales

Journal

CURRENT ZOOLOGY
Volume 67, Issue 4, Pages 403-410

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/cz/zoaa072

Keywords

Chiroptera; ectoparasites; host-parasite network; neotropics; Streblidae; urbanization

Categories

Funding

  1. CAPES [1591062]
  2. CNPq [304616/2015-0]
  3. Fundacao de Apoio ao Desenvolvimento do Ensino, and Ciencia e Tecnologia do Estado de Mato Grosso do Sul (FUNDECT) [23/200.662/2014]
  4. Paraiba State Research Foundation (FAPESQ) [518/18]
  5. US Army (CERL-ERDC)

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Research on bat-fly interactions in urbanized landscapes in Brazil found high similarity in interaction patterns and network structures across different Cerrado patches, indicating that human disturbances have minimal impact on these interactions.
Patterns of specialization and the structure of interactions between bats and ectoparasitic flies have been studied mostly on non-urban environments and at local scales. Thus, how anthropogenic disturbances influence species interactions and network structure in this system remain poorly understood. Here, we investigated patterns of interaction between Phyllostomidae bats and ectoparasitic Streblidae flies, and variations in network specialization and structure across Cerrado patches within urbanized landscapes in Brazil and between local and regional scales. We found high similarity in the richness and composition of bat and fly species across communities, associated with low turnover of interactions between networks. The high specialization of bat-streblid interactions resulted in little connected and modular networks, with the emergence of modules containing subsets of species that interact exclusively or primarily with each other. Such similarities in species and interaction composition and network structure across communities and scales suggest that bat-fly interactions within Cerrado patches are little affected by the degree of human modification in the surrounding matrix. This remarkable consistency is likely promoted by specific behaviors, the tolerance of Phyllostomidae bats to surrounding urbanized landscapes as well as by the specificity of the streblid-bat interactions shaped over evolutionary time.

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