Food web rewiring drives long-term compositional differences and late-disturbance interactions at the community level

Polazzo, F. and Marina, T. and Crettaz-Minaglia, M. and Rico, A. (2022) Food web rewiring drives long-term compositional differences and late-disturbance interactions at the community level. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 119 (17). ISSN 0027-8424

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2117364119

Abstract

Ecological communities are constantly exposed to multiple natural and anthropogenic disturbances. Multivariate composition (if recovered) has been found to need significantly more time to be regained after pulsed disturbance compared to univariate diversity metrics and functional endpoints. However, the mechanisms driving the different recovery times of communities to single and multiple disturbances remain unexplored. Here, we apply quantitative ecological network analyses to try to elucidate the mechanisms driving long-term community-composition dissimilarity and late-stage disturbance interactions at the community level. For this, we evaluate the effects of two pesticides, nutrient enrichment, and their interactions in outdoor mesocosms containing a complex freshwater community. We found changes in interactions strength to be strongly related to compositional changes and identified postdisturbance interactionstrength rewiring to be responsible for most of the observed compositional changes. Additionally, we found pesticide interactions to be significant in the long term only when both interaction strength and food-web architecture are reshaped by the disturbances. We suggest that quantitative network analysis has the potential to unveil ecological processes that prevent long-term community recovery.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Q Science > QS Ecology
Depositing User: Users 843 not found.
Date Deposited: 10 May 2022 07:48
Last Modified: 10 May 2022 07:56
URI: http://eprints.imdea-agua.org:13000/id/eprint/1370

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