4.8 Article

Ecological correlates of species' roles in highly invaded seed dispersal networks

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2009532118

关键词

ecological restoration; Hawaii; mutualisms; novel ecosystems; plant-animal interactions

资金

  1. US Department of Defense, Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program [W912HQ-14-C-0043]
  2. University of Wyoming
  3. University of New Hampshire
  4. University of Hawaii
  5. Northern Arizona University
  6. Engineer Research and Development Center EQI Basic Research Program grant

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Globally, ecosystems with a mix of native and introduced species are increasing as extinction and introduction rates rise, resulting in novel species interactions. Introduced species in these ecosystems shape the structure of interaction networks to a greater extent than native species, with niche-based processes playing a larger role in determining network structure.
Ecosystems with a mix of native and introduced species are increasing globally as extinction and introduction rates rise, resulting in novel species interactions. While species interactions are highly vulnerable to disturbance, little is known about the roles that introduced species play in novel interaction networks and what processes underlie such roles. Studying one of the most extreme cases of human-modified ecosystems, the island of Oahu, Hawaii, we show that introduced species there shape the structure of seed dispersal networks to a greater extent than native species. Although both neutral and niche-based processes influenced network structure, niche-based processes played a larger role, despite theory predicting neutral processes to be predominantly important for islands. In fact, ecological correlates of species' roles (morphology, behavior, abundance) were largely similar to those in native-dominated networks. However, the most important ecological correlates varied with spatial scale and trophic level, highlighting the importance of examining these factors separately to unravel processes determining species contributions to network structure. Although introduced species integrate into interaction networks more deeply than previously thought, by examining the mechanistic basis of species' roles we can use traits to identify species that can be removed from (or added to) a system to improve crucial ecosystem functions, such as seed dispersal.

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