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Journal ArticleDOI

The dimensionality of ecological networks

TLDR
It is shown that accounting for a few traits dramatically improves the understanding of the structure of ecological networks, and matching traits for resources and consumers, for example, fruit size and bill gape, are the most successful combinations.
Abstract
How many dimensions (trait-axes) are required to predict whether two species interact? This unanswered question originated with the idea of ecological niches, and yet bears relevance today for understanding what determines network structure. Here, we analyse a set of 200 ecological networks, including food webs, antagonistic and mutualistic networks, and find that the number of dimensions needed to completely explain all interactions is small ( < 10), with model selection favouring less than five. Using 18 high-quality webs including several species traits, we identify which traits contribute the most to explaining network structure. We show that accounting for a few traits dramatically improves our understanding of the structure of ecological networks. Matching traits for resources and consumers, for example, fruit size and bill gape, are the most successful combinations. These results link ecologically important species attributes to large-scale community structure.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Ecological Networks Across Environmental Gradients

TL;DR: Taking spatial and temporal processes into account can further elucidate network variation and improve predictions of network responses to environmental change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inferring biotic interactions from proxies

TL;DR: This work proposes a conceptual framework to infer the backbone of biotic interaction networks within regional species pools, and concludes that preliminary descriptions of the web of life can be made by careful integration of data with theory.
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Complexity and stability of ecological networks: a review of the theory

TL;DR: The use of ecological-network models to study the relationship between complexity and stability of natural ecosystems is the focus of this review, highlighting the theoretical debate and the lack of consensual agreement.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a synthetic understanding of the role of phenology in ecology and evolution

TL;DR: The relationship betweenphenology and life history, the distinction between organismal- and population-level perspectives on phenology and the influence of phenology on evolutionary processes, communities and ecosystems are discussed.
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Uniting pattern and process in plant-animal mutualistic networks: a review.

TL;DR: This review shows that researchers of plant-animal mutualisms have made substantial progress in the understanding of the processes behind the patterns observed in mutualistic networks, but are still far from a thorough, integrative mechanistic understanding.
Journal ArticleDOI

Size, foraging, and food web structure

TL;DR: The model results support the hypothesis that individual behavior, subject to natural selection, determines individual diets and that food web structure is the sum of these individual decisions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Terminology of Floral Larceny

David W. Inouye
- 01 Oct 1980 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

Community studies in pollination ecology in the high temperate andes of central chile. i. pollination mechanisms and altitudinal variation

TL;DR: Low-altitude populations of melittophilous species with broad altitudinal ranges are invariably serviced by fewer bee species as compared with lower populations, and the rich bee fauna at the lower end of the Andean zone in central Chile appears to have resulted from upward colonization from that of the subtending lowland Mediterranean sclerophyllous woodland vegetation.
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