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Adaptive rewiring shapes structure and stability in a three-guild herbivore-plant-pollinator network

Min Su, Qi Ma, Cang Hui

2024Communications Biology11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Animal species, encompassing both pollinators and herbivores, exhibit a preference for plants based on optimal foraging theory. Understanding the intricacies of these adaptive plant-animal interactions in the context of community assembly poses a main challenge in ecology. This study delves into the impact of adaptive interaction rewiring between species belonging to different guilds on the structure and stability of a 3-guild ecological network, incorporating both mutualistic and antagonistic interactions. Our findings reveal that adaptive rewiring results in sub-networks becoming more nested and compartmentalized. Furthermore, the rewiring of interactions uncovers a positive correlation between a plant's generalism concerning both pollinators and herbivores. Additionally, there is a positive correlation between a plant's degree centrality and its energy budget. Although network stability does not exhibit a clear relationship with non-random structures, it is primarily influenced by the balance of multiple interaction strengths. In summary, our results underscore the significance of adaptive interaction rewiring in shaping the structure of 3-guild networks. They emphasize the importance of considering the balance of multiple interactions for the stability of adaptive networks, providing valuable insights into the complex dynamics of ecological communities.

Topics & Concepts

GuildHerbivoreEcologyCentralityForagingPollinatorEcological networkStability (learning theory)BiologyInteraction networkContext (archaeology)PollinationComputer scienceEcosystemMachine learningHabitatMathematicsPaleontologyCombinatoricsPollenBiochemistryGenePlant and animal studiesPlant Parasitism and ResistanceEcology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies