Red de Ecoetología, Instituto de Ecología A.C., Xalapa, Mexico.
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois.
J Anim Ecol. 2019 Jun;88(6):903-914. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12978. Epub 2019 Apr 1.
Despite great interest in metrics to quantify the structure of ecological networks, the effects of sampling and scale remain poorly understood. In fact, one of the most challenging issues in ecology is how to define suitable scales (i.e., temporal or spatial) to accurately describe and understand ecological systems. Here, we sampled a series of ant-plant interaction networks in the southern Brazilian Amazon rainforest in order to determine whether the spatial sampling scale, from local to regional, affects our understanding of the structure of these networks. To this end, we recorded ant-plant interactions in adjacent 25 × 30 m subplots (local sampling scale) nested within twelve 250 × 30 m plots (regional sampling scale). Moreover, we combined adjacent or random subplots and plots in order to increase the spatial sampling scales at the local and regional levels. We then calculated commonly used binary and quantitative network-level metrics for both sampling scales (i.e., number of species and interactions, nestedness, specialization and modularity), all of which encompass a wide array of structural patterns in interaction networks. We observed increasing species and interactions across sampling scales, and while most network descriptors remained relatively constant at the local level, there was more variation at the regional scale. Among all metrics, specialization was most constant across different spatial sampling scales. Furthermore, we observed that adjacent assembly did not generate more variation in network descriptor values compared to random assembly. This finding indicates that the spatially aggregated distribution of species/individuals and abiotic conditions does not affect the organization of these interacting assemblages. Our results have a direct impact on our empirical and theoretical understanding of the ecological dynamics of species interactions by demonstrating that small spatial sampling scales should suffice to record some patterns commonly found in ant-plant interaction networks in a highly diverse tropical rainforest.
尽管人们对量化生态网络结构的指标非常感兴趣,但对采样和尺度的影响仍了解甚少。事实上,生态学中最具挑战性的问题之一是如何定义合适的尺度(即时间或空间),以准确描述和理解生态系统。在这里,我们在巴西南部的亚马逊雨林中采样了一系列蚂蚁-植物相互作用网络,以确定从局部到区域的空间采样尺度是否会影响我们对这些网络结构的理解。为此,我们在相邻的 25×30 米的子区(局部采样尺度)中记录了蚂蚁-植物相互作用,这些子区嵌套在 12 个 250×30 米的图块(区域采样尺度)中。此外,我们将相邻或随机的子区和图块组合在一起,以增加局部和区域尺度的空间采样尺度。然后,我们针对这两个采样尺度计算了常用的二元和定量网络级指标(即物种和相互作用的数量、嵌套性、专化性和模块性),所有这些指标都涵盖了相互作用网络中广泛的结构模式。我们观察到随着采样尺度的增加,物种和相互作用的数量也在增加,而大多数网络描述符在局部水平上相对保持不变,但在区域水平上则有更多的变化。在所有的指标中,专化性在不同的空间采样尺度上最稳定。此外,我们观察到相邻组装并没有比随机组装产生更多的网络描述符值的变化。这一发现表明,物种/个体和非生物条件的空间聚集分布不会影响这些相互作用组合的组织。我们的研究结果直接影响了我们对物种相互作用生态动力学的经验和理论理解,表明在高度多样化的热带雨林中,较小的空间采样尺度足以记录一些常见的蚂蚁-植物相互作用网络模式。