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Sökning: WFRF:(Wootton Kate) > (2024)

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1.
  • Cirtwill, Alyssa R., et al. (författare)
  • Species motif participation provides unique information about species risk of extinction
  • 2024
  • Ingår i: Journal of Animal Ecology. - : WILEY. - 0021-8790 .- 1365-2656.
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Loss of species in food webs can set in motion a cascade of additional (secondary) extinctions. A species' position in a food web (e.g. its trophic level or number of interactions) is known to affect its ability to persist following disturbance. These simple measures, however, offer only a coarse description of how species fit into their community. One would therefore expect that more detailed structural measures such as participation in three-species motifs (meso-scale structures which provide information on a species' direct and indirect interactions) will also be related to probability of persistence. Disturbances affecting the basal resources have particularly strong effects on the rest of the food web. However, how disturbances branch out and affect consumer persistence depends on the structural pattern of species interactions in several steps. The magnitude, for example, the proportion of basal resources lost, will likely also affect the outcome. Here, we analyse whether a consumer's risk of secondary extinction after the removal of basal resources depends on the consumer's motif participation and how this relationship varies with the severity of disturbance. We show that consumer species which participate more frequently in the direct competition motif and less frequently in the omnivory motif generally have higher probability of persistence following disturbance to basal resources. However, both the strength of the disturbance and the overall network structure (i.e. connectance) affect the strength and direction of relationships between motif participation and persistence. Motif participation therefore captures important trends in species persistence and provides a rich description of species' structural roles in their communities, but must be considered in the context of network structure as a whole and of the specific disturbance applied. Like degree and trophic level, a species' participation in meso-scale motifs can affect its persistence after disturbance. We show that these relationships also depend strongly on the strength of disturbance.image
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2.
  • Wootton, Kate, et al. (författare)
  • Layer-specific imprints of traits within a plant-herbivore-predator network - complementary insights from complementary methods
  • 2024
  • Ingår i: Ecography. - 0906-7590 .- 1600-0587. ; 2024
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Who interacts with whom is a key question in community and network ecology. The concept that these interactions may be driven by a match between the traits of consumer and resource species is known as trait-matching. If trait-matching would allow for general predictions of interaction structure based on sufficiently few and easily-measurable traits, then this approach could replace the laborious description of each individual pairwise interaction. To resolve imprints of trait-matching in a species-rich tri-trophic Salix-galler-parasitoid network, and to identify the most relevant traits, we applied five different methods, each approaching the same phenomenon from a different perspective. As traits, we used, body sizes, gall type (position on plant, structure of gall) and phenology, among others, as well as phylogenetic proxies. When jointly applied, the methods demonstrate distinctly different imprints of traits within the two bipartite network elements (Salix-galler versus galler-parasitoid interactions). Of the galler-parasitoid sub-network's interactions, approximately half were explainable by the species traits used; of the Salix-galler sub-network's interactions, traits explained at most two-fifths. Gall type appeared to be the most important structuring trait in both networks. Phylogeny explained as much, or more than did our tested traits, suggesting that traits may be conserved and phylogeny therefore an effective proxy. Overall, the more specialized structure of the Salix-galler network versus the more nested structure of the galler-parasitoid network meant that different methods were more effective at capturing interactions and interaction structure in the different sub-networks. Thus, our analysis reveals how structuring impacts may vary even between levels within the same multitrophic network, and calls for comparative analyses of trait matching across a wide set of systems and methods.
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