4.8 Article

Abundance and generalisation in mutualistic networks: solving the chicken-and-egg dilemma

Journal

ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages 4-11

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ele.12535

Keywords

causality; generalisation; mutualistic networks; plant-animal interactions; pollination; seed dispersal; specialisation

Categories

Funding

  1. PEDECIBA-Uruguay
  2. ANII (SNI)
  3. FONCYT [PICT-2010-2779]
  4. TWAS-Unesco as an Associate in the Physics Dept., Universidad de la Republica

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A frequent observation in plant-animal mutualistic networks is that abundant species tend to be more generalised, interacting with a broader range of interaction partners than rare species. Uncovering the causal relationship between abundance and generalisation has been hindered by a chicken-and-egg dilemma: is generalisation a by-product of being abundant, or does high abundance result from generalisation? Here, we analyse a database of plant-pollinator and plant-seed disperser networks, and provide strong evidence that the causal link between abundance and generalisation is uni-directional. Specifically, species appear to be generalists because they are more abundant, but the converse, that is that species become more abundant because they are generalists, is not supported by our analysis. Furthermore, null model analyses suggest that abundant species interact with many other species simply because they are more likely to encounter potential interaction partners.

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