Keep the bees off the trees: The particular vulnerability of species in the periphery of mutualistic networks to shock perturbations

Lukas Halekotte, Anna Vanselow, Ulrike Feudel
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Abstract

We study the phenomenon of multistability in mutualistic networks of plants and pollinators, where one desired state in which all species coexist competes with multiple states in which some species are gone extinct. In this setting, we examine the relation between the endangerment of pollinator species and their position within the mutualistic network. To this end, we compare endangerment rankings which are derived from the species' probabilities of going extinct due to random shock perturbations with rankings obtained from different network theoretic centrality metrics. We find that a pollinator's endangerment is strongly linked to its degree of mutualistic specialization and its position within the core-periphery structure of its mutualistic network, with the most endangered species being specialists in the outer periphery. Since particularly well established instances of such peripheral areas are tree-shaped structures which stem from links between nodes/species in the outermost shell of the network, we summarized our findings in the admittedly ambiguous slogan 'keep the bees off the trees'. Finally, we challenge the generality of our findings by testing whether the title of this work still applies when being located in the outer periphery allows pollinators to avoid competitive pressure.
让蜜蜂远离树木互惠网络外围物种对冲击扰动的特殊脆弱性
我们研究了植物与传粉昆虫互生网络中的多态性现象,在这种网络中,所有物种共存的理想状态与某些物种灭绝的多重状态相互竞争。在这种情况下,我们研究了授粉者物种的濒危程度与其在互惠网络中的地位之间的关系。为此,我们将根据随机冲击扰动导致物种灭绝的概率得出的濒危程度排名与根据不同的网络理论中心度量得出的排名进行了比较。我们发现,授粉昆虫的濒危程度与其互惠专业化程度以及在互惠网络的核心-外围结构中所处的位置密切相关,其中最濒危的物种是外围地区的专业化物种。最后,我们通过检验当位于外围的传粉昆虫能够避免竞争压力时,本文的标题是否仍然适用,从而对我们发现的普遍性提出质疑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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