Antagonistic interaction networks are structured independently of latitude and host guild.
Antagonistic interaction networks are structured independently of latitude and host guild.
An increase in species richness with decreasing latitude is a prominent pattern in nature. However, it remains unclear whether there are corresponding latitudinal gradients in the properties of ecological interaction networks. We investigated the structure of 216 quantitative antagonistic networks comprising insect hosts and their parasitoids, drawn from 28 studies from the High Arctic to the tropics. Key metrics of network structure were strongly affected by the size of the interaction matrix (i.e. the total number of interactions documented between individuals) and by the taxonomic diversity of the host taxa involved. After controlling for these sampling effects, quantitative networks showed no consistent structural patterns across latitude and host guilds, suggesting that there may be basic rules for how sets of antagonists interact with resource species. Furthermore, the strong association between network size and structure implies that many apparent spatial and temporal variations in network structure may prove to be artefacts.
340-349
Morris, Rebecca
f63d9be3-e08f-4251-b6a0-43b312d3997e
Gripenberg, Sofia
0dd3e34f-e8f7-4459-bafd-0d96f219c2e2
Lewis, Owen
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Roslin, Tomas
83f9efc1-d5ad-4f6a-b270-2ea516f4d077
March 2014
Morris, Rebecca
f63d9be3-e08f-4251-b6a0-43b312d3997e
Gripenberg, Sofia
0dd3e34f-e8f7-4459-bafd-0d96f219c2e2
Lewis, Owen
b8eb2d11-0367-41d5-83ff-27109eae5f1b
Roslin, Tomas
83f9efc1-d5ad-4f6a-b270-2ea516f4d077
Morris, Rebecca, Gripenberg, Sofia, Lewis, Owen and Roslin, Tomas
(2014)
Antagonistic interaction networks are structured independently of latitude and host guild.
Ecology Letters, 17 (3), .
(doi:10.1111/ele.12235).
Abstract
An increase in species richness with decreasing latitude is a prominent pattern in nature. However, it remains unclear whether there are corresponding latitudinal gradients in the properties of ecological interaction networks. We investigated the structure of 216 quantitative antagonistic networks comprising insect hosts and their parasitoids, drawn from 28 studies from the High Arctic to the tropics. Key metrics of network structure were strongly affected by the size of the interaction matrix (i.e. the total number of interactions documented between individuals) and by the taxonomic diversity of the host taxa involved. After controlling for these sampling effects, quantitative networks showed no consistent structural patterns across latitude and host guilds, suggesting that there may be basic rules for how sets of antagonists interact with resource species. Furthermore, the strong association between network size and structure implies that many apparent spatial and temporal variations in network structure may prove to be artefacts.
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Accepted/In Press date: 19 November 2013
e-pub ahead of print date: 19 December 2013
Published date: March 2014
Organisations:
Biomedicine
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 409059
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/409059
ISSN: 1461-023X
PURE UUID: c98b4282-8862-4ff0-9dae-7a3be7dd05e3
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Date deposited: 28 May 2017 04:06
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:29
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Author:
Sofia Gripenberg
Author:
Owen Lewis
Author:
Tomas Roslin
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