TY - JOUR
T1 - Bat-fruit networks structure resist habitat modification but species roles change in the most transformed habitats
AU - Castaño, John Harold
AU - Carranza-Quiceno, Jaime Andrés
AU - Pérez-Torres, y. Jairo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier Masson SAS
PY - 2020/5
Y1 - 2020/5
N2 - Species do not function as isolated entities, rather they are organized in complex networks of interactions. These networks develop the ecological processes that provide ecosystem services for human societies. Understanding the causes and consequences of changes in ecological networks due to landscape modification would allow us to understand the consequences of ecological processes. However, there is still few empirical data on the effects of network characteristics on the loss of natural environments. We investigated how bat–fruit networks respond to three landscapes representing the gradient of modification from pre-montane forest to a heterogeneous agricultural landscape in the Colombian Andes (continuous forests, forest fragments, and crops). We found that forest contained smaller bat–fruit networks than forest fragments and crops. Modified landscapes had similar ecological network structures to forest (nestedness and modularity), but crops contained less specialized networks compared to forests and fragments and the species role in these habitats were changed. The networks in the rural coffee landscape maintain their structure in the different transformation scenarios, indicating that seed dispersal services are maintained even in the most transformed scenarios. Although the number of species does not decrease due to transformations, species change their roles in the most transformed habitats. This result sheds light on the way that bat-fruit networks respond to anthropogenic transformations, showing higher stability than theoretically predicted.
AB - Species do not function as isolated entities, rather they are organized in complex networks of interactions. These networks develop the ecological processes that provide ecosystem services for human societies. Understanding the causes and consequences of changes in ecological networks due to landscape modification would allow us to understand the consequences of ecological processes. However, there is still few empirical data on the effects of network characteristics on the loss of natural environments. We investigated how bat–fruit networks respond to three landscapes representing the gradient of modification from pre-montane forest to a heterogeneous agricultural landscape in the Colombian Andes (continuous forests, forest fragments, and crops). We found that forest contained smaller bat–fruit networks than forest fragments and crops. Modified landscapes had similar ecological network structures to forest (nestedness and modularity), but crops contained less specialized networks compared to forests and fragments and the species role in these habitats were changed. The networks in the rural coffee landscape maintain their structure in the different transformation scenarios, indicating that seed dispersal services are maintained even in the most transformed scenarios. Although the number of species does not decrease due to transformations, species change their roles in the most transformed habitats. This result sheds light on the way that bat-fruit networks respond to anthropogenic transformations, showing higher stability than theoretically predicted.
KW - Chiropterocorous plants
KW - Coffee cultural landscape of Colombia
KW - Complex networks
KW - Ecological networks
KW - Phyllostomids
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85083327721&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.actao.2020.103550
DO - 10.1016/j.actao.2020.103550
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85083327721
SN - 1146-609X
VL - 105
JO - Acta Oecologica
JF - Acta Oecologica
M1 - 103550
ER -