4.8 Article

Effects of habitat destruction on coevolving metacommunities

Journal

ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 25, Issue 12, Pages 2597-2610

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ele.14118

Keywords

antagonism; eco-evolutionary feedback; ecological networks; mutualism; spatially explicit models

Categories

Funding

  1. Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Forderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung [310030_197201]
  2. University of Zurich Research Priority Program Global Change and Biodiversity
  3. SNSF
  4. University of Zurich
  5. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [310030_197201] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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Habitat destruction poses a growing threat to biodiversity and ecosystem services, resulting in reductions in species abundance, extinction, and altered coevolutionary trajectories. The effects of habitat loss on coevolution differ among mutualistic and antagonistic communities, with mutualistic networks being more resilient.
Habitat destruction is a growing threat to biodiversity and ecosystem services. The ecological consequences of habitat loss and fragmentation involve reductions in species abundance and even the extinction of species and their interactions. However, we do not yet understand how habitat loss alters the coevolutionary trajectories of the remaining species or how coevolution, in turn, affects their response to habitat loss. To investigate this, we develop a spatially explicit model which couples metacommunity and coevolutionary dynamics. We show that, by changing the size, composition and structure of local networks, habitat destruction increases the diversity of coevolutionary trajectories of mutualists across the landscape. Conversely, in antagonistic communities, some species increase while others reduce their spatial trait heterogeneity. Furthermore, we show that while coevolution dampens the negative effects of habitat destruction in mutualistic networks, its effects on the persistence of antagonistic communities tend to be smaller and less predictable.

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