Hernández-Castellano C, Valladares D N, Calleja J A, Serrano E, Perea R
Plant & Animal Ecology Lab (PAELLA), Centro para la Conservación de la Biodiversidad y el Desarrollo Sostenible (CBDS), ETSI Montes, Forestal y Medio Natural, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
Wildlife Ecology & Health Group (WE&H), Servei d'Ecopatologia de Fauna Salvatge (SEFaS), Departament de Medicina i Cirurgia Animals, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Cerdanyola del Vallès, Spain.
Plant Biol (Stuttg). 2025 Jul 18. doi: 10.1111/plb.70053.
Large herbivores are keystone species, so changes in their population abundance can have cascading effects on ecosystems. Over the last decades, many species of deer (Cervidae) have experienced unprecedented densities across many areas of the Northern Hemisphere, potentially leading to simplification of plant-pollinator communities, disruption of their interactions, and destabilization of ecological networks. Our study explores the impacts of increasing red deer (Cervus elaphus) densities on plant-pollinator networks. We describe, to our knowledge, the first large wild herbivore manipulative experiment with increasing densities, consisting of comparable hectare-scale enclosures in a Mediterranean ecosystem. We simulated two current scenarios of deer overabundance: high densities (>30 individuals km) and hyper densities (>90 individuals km). We compared these scenarios to an adjacent control exclosure (no deer). Deer herbivory reduced flower abundance of shrubs, as well as flowering plant and pollinator richness. Remaining plants and pollinators lost interactions, and some plants lost pollinator visitors. Network specialization and modularity decreased because modules (groups of strongly connected species) formed by herbs and specialist pollinators were gradually extirpated as deer density increased. This simplification increased network connectance and nestedness. Network robustness (a measure of stability) remained unaltered because the dominant plant, which attracted most pollinators, was unpalatable to deer. We conclude that, in overabundant deer scenarios: (1) impacts on plant-pollinator networks will increase with increasing deer density; (2) plant-pollinator networks will be eroded, especially if composed of palatable, rare plants, visited by specialist pollinators; but (3) plant-pollinator network stability will not be affected if dominant plants are generalists and unpalatable.
大型食草动物是关键物种,因此它们种群数量的变化会对生态系统产生连锁反应。在过去几十年里,许多鹿种(鹿科)在北半球的许多地区经历了前所未有的高密度,这可能导致植物-传粉者群落简化、它们之间的相互作用受到干扰以及生态网络不稳定。我们的研究探讨了马鹿(Cervus elaphus)密度增加对植物-传粉者网络的影响。据我们所知,我们描述了第一个随着密度增加的大型野生食草动物操纵实验,该实验由地中海生态系统中可比的公顷规模围栏组成。我们模拟了当前鹿数量过多的两种情况:高密度(>30只/平方公里)和超高密度(>90只/平方公里)。我们将这些情况与相邻的对照围栏(无鹿)进行了比较。鹿的啃食减少了灌木的花朵数量,以及开花植物和传粉者的丰富度。剩余的植物和传粉者失去了相互作用,一些植物失去了传粉者访客。网络的专业化和模块化程度降低,因为随着鹿密度的增加,由草本植物和专化传粉者形成的模块(紧密相连的物种组)逐渐灭绝。这种简化增加了网络的连通性和嵌套性。网络稳健性(稳定性的一种度量)保持不变,因为吸引大多数传粉者的优势植物对鹿来说并不可口。我们得出结论,在鹿数量过多的情况下:(1)对植物-传粉者网络的影响将随着鹿密度的增加而增大;(2)植物-传粉者网络将受到侵蚀,特别是如果由专化传粉者访问的可口、稀有植物组成;但是(3)如果优势植物是泛化种且不可口,植物-传粉者网络的稳定性将不会受到影响。