4.7 Article

Impacts of extreme climatic events on trophic network complexity and multidimensional stability

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 104, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3951

Keywords

community ecology; disturbance; ecological stability; energy fluxes; heatwave; network analysis; recovery; resilience; stability-complexity

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Untangling the relationship between network complexity and ecological stability under climate change, particularly extreme climatic events, is a challenging task. This study explores the effects of extreme heatwaves on the complexity of freshwater ecosystems and its correlation with stability components of the community. The findings suggest that reduction in network complexity leads to decreased functional and compositional resistance, while increased link-weighted network complexity improves functional and energy flux recovery and resilience but increases compositional instability.
Untangling the relationship between network complexity and ecological stability under climate change is an arduous challenge for theoretical and empirical ecology. Even more so, when considering extreme climatic events. Here, we studied the effects of extreme climatic events (heatwaves) on the complexity of realistic freshwater ecosystems using topological and quantitative trophic network metrics. Next, we linked changes in network complexity with the investigation of four stability components (temporal stability, resistance, resilience, and recovery) of community's functional, compositional, and energy flux stability. We found reduction in topological network complexity to be correlated with reduction of functional and compositional resistance. However, temperature-driven increase in link-weighted network complexity increased functional and energy flux recovery and resilience, but at the cost of increased compositional instability. Overall, we propose an overarching approach to elucidate the effects of climate change on multidimensional stability through the lens of network complexity, providing helpful insights for preserving ecosystems stability under climate change.

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