Published 2007 | Version v1
Journal article Restricted

Species abundance and asymmetric interaction strength in ecological networks

Description

(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) The strength of interactions among species in a network tends to be highly asymmetric. We evaluate the hypothesis that this asymmetry results from the distribution of abundance among species, so that species interactions occur randomly among individuals. We used a database on mutualistic and antagonistic bipartite quantitative interaction networks. We show that across all types of networks asymmetry was correlated with abundance, so that rare species were asymmetrically affected by their abundant partners, while pairs of interacting abundant species tended to exhibit more symmetric, reciprocally strong effects. A null model shows that abundance provides a sufficient explanation of the asymmetry structure in some networks, but suggests the role of additional factors in others. Although not universal, our hypothesis holds for a substantial fraction of networks analyzed here, and should be considered as a null model in all studies aimed at evaluating the ecological and evolutionary consequences of species interactions.

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Additional details

Identifiers

URL
hash://md5/2c99966044a4e224854a97232b049b5c
URN
urn:lsid:zotero.org:groups:5435545:items:7SZSXRD4
DOI
10.1111/j.0030-1299.2007.15828.x

Biodiversity

Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Chordata
Class
Mammalia
Order
Chiroptera