4.5 Article

Ecological network complexity scales with area

期刊

NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION
卷 6, 期 3, 页码 307-+

出版社

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41559-021-01644-4

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资金

  1. TULIP Laboratory of Excellence [ANR-10-LABX-41, 394 ANR-11-IDEX-002-02]
  2. Region Midi-Pyrenees project [CNRS 121090]
  3. FRAGCLIM Consolidator Grant [726176]
  4. European Research Council under the European Union
  5. Spanish MICINN [CGL2009-12646, CSD2008-0040, CGL2013-41856]
  6. Sao Paulo Research Foundation [FAPESP 2015/15172-7]
  7. FCT-Foundation for Science and Technology [UIDB/05183/2020]
  8. ERA-Net BiodivERsA-Belmont Forum
  9. Agence National pour la Recherche [ANR-16-EBI3-0003, ANR-18-EBI4-0009]
  10. Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-16-EBI3-0003, ANR-18-EBI4-0009] Funding Source: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)

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The study finds that the number of species, links, and links per species in ecological networks increase with the size of the geographical area following a power law. However, the distribution of links per species varies little with area, indicating the conservation of the fundamental organization of interactions within networks. The results suggest that biodiversity-area relationships can be extended to higher levels of network complexity.
Larger geographical areas contain more species-an observation raised to a law in ecology. Less explored is whether biodiversity changes are accompanied by a modification of interaction networks. We use data from 32 spatial interaction networks from different ecosystems to analyse how network structure changes with area. We find that basic community structure descriptors (number of species, links and links per species) increase with area following a power law. Yet, the distribution of links per species varies little with area, indicating that the fundamental organization of interactions within networks is conserved. Our null model analyses suggest that the spatial scaling of network structure is determined by factors beyond species richness and the number of links. We demonstrate that biodiversity-area relationships can be extended from species counts to higher levels of network complexity. Therefore, the consequences of anthropogenic habitat destruction may extend from species loss to wider simplification of natural communities. Using 32 ecological networks (host-parasite, plant-pollinator, plant-herbivore and other food webs), the authors show that several network properties scale with the size of the sampling area, suggesting a new type of biodiversity-area relationship.

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