Predicting the consequences of disperser extinction richness matters the most when abundance is low

1. The ongoing biodiversity crisis entails the concomitant loss of species and the ecological services they provide. Global defaunation, and particularly the loss of frugivores, may negatively affect the seed dispersal of fleshy-fruited plant species, with predictable stronger impacts in simplified...

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Otros Autores: Rumeu, Beatriz, Devoto, Mariano, Traveset, Anna, Olesen, Jens M., Vargas, Pablo, Nogales, Manuel, Heleno, Ruben
Formato: Artículo
Lenguaje:Inglés
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Acceso en línea:http://ri.agro.uba.ar/files/intranet/articulo/2017rumeu.pdf
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245 |a Predicting the consequences of disperser extinction  |b richness matters the most when abundance is low 
520 |a 1. The ongoing biodiversity crisis entails the concomitant loss of species and the ecological services they provide. Global defaunation, and particularly the loss of frugivores, may negatively affect the seed dispersal of fleshy-fruited plant species, with predictable stronger impacts in simplified communities such as those on oceanic islands. However, logistical difficulties have hindered the experimental and theoretical need to disentangle the roles of species identity, richness (i.e. number of species) and abundance. Consequently, studies to date have focused exclusively on the loss of species richness leaving us largely ignorant regarding how species identity and abundance affect the loss of ecosystem functions. 2. Here, we applied a network approach to disentangle the effects of disperser abundance, richness and identity on the seed dispersal service provided by frugivores to the Galapagos plant community. 3. We found that both abundance and richness of the dispersers significantly affect the function of seed dispersal and that richness becomes increasingly important as disperser abundance declines. Extinction simulations revealed that the order of species loss has profound implications to the plant community. On the one hand, abundant generalist dispersers like the Galapagos lizards, can mitigate the loss of specialized dispersers. On the other hand, specific threats affecting key dispersers can lead to the rapid collapse of the community-level dispersal services. 4. Our results suggest that the identity of the disperser species lost can have a large effect on the number of plant species dispersed, and generalist species are essential to the persistence of the community dispersal service. Both abundance and species richness of seed dispersers are key and synergistic drivers of the number of plant species dispersed. Consequently, the coupled negative effect of population declines and species extinctions in frugivore assemblages may lead to an accelerated loss of the seed dispersal function. 
653 |a BIODIVERSITY LOSS 
653 |a BIOTIC HOMOGENIZATION 
653 |a DEFAUNATION 
653 |a DISPERSAL FAILURE 
653 |a ECOLOGICAL NETWORKS 
653 |a ECOSYSTEM FUNCTION 
653 |a GALAPAGOS ISLANDS 
653 |a MUTUALISM DISRUPTION 
653 |a OCEANIC ISLANDS 
653 |a SEED DISPERSAL SERVICE 
700 1 |a Rumeu, Beatriz  |u Centre for Functional Ecology, Department of Life Sciences, Calçada Martim de Freitas, University of Coimbra, 3000-456 Coimbra, Portugal - E-mail: bea.rumeu@gmail.com  |9 67196 
700 1 |9 11883  |a Devoto, Mariano  |u Facultad de Agronomía, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Av. San Maríın 4453 C1417DSE Buenos Aires, Argentina 
700 1 |a Traveset, Anna  |u Mediterranean Institute of Advanced Studies (CSIC-UIB), Terrestrial Ecology Group, C/Miquel Marqués 21, 07190-Esporles, Mallorca, Balearic Islands, Spain  |9 67197 
700 1 |a Olesen, Jens M.  |u Department of Bioscience, Aarhus University, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark  |9 67198 
700 1 |a Vargas, Pablo  |u Royal Botanical Garden Madrid (CSIC-RJB), Plaza de Murillo, 2, 28014 Madrid, Spain  |9 51167 
700 1 |a Nogales, Manuel  |u Island Ecology and Evolution Research Group (CSIC-IPNA), 38206 La Laguna, Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain  |9 67199 
700 1 |9 67200  |a Heleno, Ruben  |u Centre for Functional Ecology, Department of Life Sciences, Calçada Martim de Freitas, University of Coimbra, 3000-456 Coimbra, Portugal 
773 |t Functional Ecology   |g Vol.31, no.10 (2017), p.1910-1920, grafs., tbls. 
856 |f 2017rumeu  |i en intranet  |q application/pdf  |u http://ri.agro.uba.ar/files/intranet/articulo/2017rumeu.pdf  |x ARTI201806 
856 |u https://www.wiley.com  |z LINK AL EDITOR 
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942 |c ARTICULO 
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