4.7 Article

The disruption of a keystone interaction erodes pollination and seed dispersal networks

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 103, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3547

Keywords

cascading effects; keystone mutualisms; network motifs; non-native species; pollination networks; seed dispersal networks

Categories

Funding

  1. Agencia Nacional de Promocion Cientifica y Tecnologica of Argentina [PICT 2014-2484]
  2. Rufford Foundation [26510-1]

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Understanding the impacts of global change on ecological communities is a major challenge in modern ecology. Disruption of the hummingbird-mistletoe-marsupial mutualism can lead to cascading effects on both pollination and seed dispersal networks in Patagonia. The disruption of this mutualism by non-native species can result in less complex ecological networks.
Understanding the impacts of global change on ecological communities is a major challenge in modern ecology. The gain or loss of particular species and the disruption of key interactions are both consequences and drivers of global change that can lead to the disassembly of ecological networks. We examined whether the disruption of a hummingbird-mistletoe-marsupial mutualism by the invasion of non-native species can have cascading effects on both pollination and seed dispersal networks in the temperate forest of Patagonia, Argentina. We focused on network motifs, subnetworks composed of a small number of species exhibiting particular patterns of interaction, to examine the structure and diversity of mutualistic networks. We found that the hummingbird-mistletoe-marsupial mutualism plays a critical role in the community by increasing the complexity of pollination and seed dispersal networks through supporting a high diversity of interactions. Moreover, we found that the disruption of this tripartite mutualism by non-native ungulates resulted in diverse indirect effects that led to less complex pollination and seed dispersal networks. Our results demonstrate that the gains and losses of particular species and the alteration of key interactions can lead to cascading effects in the community through the disassembly of mutualistic networks.

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