2018 ESA Annual Meeting (August 5 -- 10)

OOS 37-8 - Seed-dispersal interactions in fragmented landscapes: A metanetwork approach

Friday, August 10, 2018: 10:30 AM
344, New Orleans Ernest N. Morial Convention Center
Carine Emer, Conservation Biology Lab, São Paulo State University (UNESP), Rio Claro, Brazil, Marco A. Pizo, Zoology, Unesp, Rio Claro, Brazil, Mauro Galetti, Departamento de Ecologia, Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), Rio Claro (SP), Brazil and Pedro Jordano, Integrative Ecology, Estacion Biologica de Donana, EBD-CSIC, Sevilla, Spain
Background/Question/Methods

Mutualistic interactions repeatedly preserved across fragmented landscapes can scale-up to form a spatial metanetwork describing the distribution of interactions across patches. We explored the structure of a bird seed-dispersal (BSD) metanetwork in 16 Neotropical forest fragments to test whether a distinct subset of BSD-interactions may mediate landscape functional connectivity.

Results/Conclusions

The metanetwork is interaction-rich, modular and poorly connected, showing high beta-diversity and turnover of species and interactions. Interactions involving large-sized species were lost in fragments < 10 000 ha, indicating a strong filtering by habitat fragmentation on the functional diversity of BSD-interactions. Persistent interactions were performed by small-seeded, fast growing plant species and by generalist, small-bodied bird species able to cross the fragmented landscape. This reduced subset of interactions forms the metanetwork components persisting to defaunation and fragmentation, and may generate long-term deficits of carbon storage while delaying forest regeneration at the landscape level.