Published September 20, 2021 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data and scripts from "Congruent trophic pathways underpin global coral reef food webs"

  • 1. Department of Marine Science, Marine Science Institute, University of Texas at Austin, Port Aransas, Texas 78373, USA
  • 2. Paris Sciences et Lettres Université Paris: Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes-Université de Perpignan Via Domitia-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Unité de Service et de Recherche 3278 Centre de Recherches Insulaires et Observatoire de l'Environnement, Université de Perpignan, 66860 Perpignan, France;
  • 3. Unité mixte de recherche Entropie, Labex Corail, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, Université de Perpignan, 66860 Perpignan, France
  • 4. Instititut Méditerranéen d'Océanologie, Aix-Marseille Université, UM 110, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique/Institut National des Sciences de l'Univers, Institut pour la Recherche et le Développement, 13288 Marseille, France
  • 5. Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Helsinki, 00014 Helsinki, Finland

Description

Ecological interactions uphold ecosystem structure and functioning. However, as species richness increases, the number of possible interactions rises exponentially. More than 6,000 species of coral reef fishes exist across the world’s tropical oceans, resulting in an almost innumerable array of possible trophic interactions. Distilling general patterns in these interactions across different bioregions stands to improve our understanding of the processes that govern coral reef functioning. Here, we show that across bioregions, tropical coral reef food webs exhibit a remarkable congruence in their trophic interactions. Specifically, by compiling and investigating the structure of six coral reef food webs across distinct bioregions, we show that when accounting for consumer size and resource availability, these food webs share more trophic interactions than expected by chance. In addition, coral reef food webs are dominated by dietary specialists, which makes trophic pathways vulnerable to biodiversity loss. Prey partitioning among these specialists is geographically consistent, and this pattern intensifies when weak interactions are disregarded. Our results suggest that energy flows through coral reef communities along broadly comparable trophic pathways. Yet, these critical pathways are maintained by species with narrow, specialized diets, which threatens the existence of coral reef functioning in the face of biodiversity loss.

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