Real-world Interaction Networks Buffer Impact of Small Evolutionary Shifts On Biodiversity
Real-world Interaction Networks Buffer Impact of Small Evolutionary Shifts On Biodiversity
Abstract Biodiversity maintenance and community evolution depend on the species interaction network. The “diversity-stability debate” has revealed that the complex interaction structure within real-world ecosystems determines how ecological communities respond to environmental changes, but can have opposite effects depending on the community type. Here we quantify the influence of shifts on community diversity and stability at both the species level and the community level. We use interaction networks from 19 real-world mutualistic communities and simulate shifts to antagonism. We demonstrate that both the placement of the shifting species in the community, as well as the structure of the interaction network as a whole contribute to stability and diversity maintenance under shifts. Our results suggest that the interaction structure of natural communities generally enhances community robustness against small ecological and evolutionary changes, but exacerbates the consequences of large changes.
Leventhal Gabriel E.、Wang Liyu、Kouyos Roger D.
Institute of Integrative Biology, ETH ZurichInstitute of Robotics and Intelligent Systems, ETH ZurichDepartment of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ||Division of Infectious Diseases and Hospital Epidemiology, University Hospital 9 Zurich, Zurich
环境科学理论生物科学现状、生物科学发展环境生物学
mutualistic networksecosystem stabilitycommunity diversity
Leventhal Gabriel E.,Wang Liyu,Kouyos Roger D..Real-world Interaction Networks Buffer Impact of Small Evolutionary Shifts On Biodiversity[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-05-01].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/013086.点此复制
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