Bascompte, J., Jordano, P., Melián, C.J. and Olesen, J.M. 2003. The nested assembly of plantanimal mutualistic networks. PNAS 100: 93839387.
Most
studies of plantanimal mutualisms involve a small number of
species. There is almost no information on the structural organization
of species-rich mutualistic networks despite its potential importance for
the maintenance of diversity. Here we analyze 52 mutualistic networks and
showthat they are highly nested; that is, the more specialist species interact
only with proper subsets of those species interacting with the more generalists.
This assembly pattern generates highly asymmetrical interactions and organizes
the community cohesively around a central core of interactions. Thus, mutualistic
networks are neither randomly assembled nor organized in compartments arising
from tight, parallel specialization. Furthermore, nestedness increases
with the complexity (number of interactions) of the network: for a given
number of species, communities with more interactions are significantly
more nested. Our results indicate a nonrandom pattern of community organization
that may be relevant for our understanding of the organization and persistence
of biodiversity.
| Photo: A plant-frugivore interaction network in SW Spain (Doñana). Frugivore species are depicted by colored nodes; plants are greyed nodes. Links between them represent the interactions. |