Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/17581
Título: The macroecology of phylogenetically structured hummingbird-plant networks
Autor: Martín González, Ana M.
Dalsgaard, Bo
Nogués-Bravo, David
Graham, Catherine H.
Schleuning, Matthias
Maruyama, Pietro Kiyoshi
Abrahamczyk, Stefan
Alarcón, Ruben
Araujo, Andréa Cardoso de
Araújo, Francielle Paulina
Azevedo, Severino Mendes de
Baquero, Andrea C.
COTTON, PETER A.
Ingversen, Tanja Toftemark
Kohler, Glauco
Lara, Carlos
Las-Casas, Flor Maria Guedes
Machado, Adriana Oliveira
Machado, Caio Graco
Maglianesi, María Alejandra
McGuire, Jimmy A.
Moura, Alan Cerqueira
Oliveira, Genilda M.
Oliveira, Paulo E.
Ornelas, J. F.
Rodrigues, Licléia da Cruz
Rosero-Lasprilla, Liliana
Rui, Ana Maria
Sazima, Marlies And I.
Timmermann, Allan
Varassin, Isabela Galarda
Vizentin-Bugoni, Jeferson
Wang, Zhiheng
Watts, Stella
Rahbek, Carsten
Martinez, Neo D.
Palavras-chave: Biogeography
Bird
Climate Effect
Coevolution
Community Ecology
Interspecific Competition
Macroecology
Mutualism
Phylogenetics
Plant-pollinator Interaction
Pollinator
Specialization
Species Richness
Aves
Trochilidae
Data do documento: 2015
Revista: Global Ecology and Biogeography
É parte de: Volume 24, Número 11, Pags. 1212-1224
Abstract: Aim: To investigate the association between hummingbird-plant network structure and species richness, phylogenetic signal on species' interaction pattern, insularity and historical and current climate. Location: Fifty-four communities along a c. 10,000 km latitudinal gradient across the Americas (39°N-32°S), ranging from sea level to c. 3700m a.s.l., located on the mainland and on islands and covering a wide range of climate regimes. Methods: We measured the level of specialization and modularity in mutualistic plant-hummingbird interaction networks. Using an ordinary least squares multimodel approach, we examined the influence of species richness, phylogenetic signal, insularity and current and historical climate conditions on network structure (null-model-corrected specialization and modularity). Results: Phylogenetically related species, especially plants, showed a tendency to interact with a similar array of mutualistic partners. The spatial variation in network structure exhibited a constant association with species phylogeny (R2=0.18-0.19); however, network structure showed the strongest association with species richness and environmental factors (R2=0.20-0.44 and R2=0.32-0.45, respectively). Specifically, higher levels of specialization and modularity were associated with species-rich communities and communities in which closely related hummingbirds visited distinct sets of flowering species. On the mainland, specialization was also associated with warmer temperatures and greater historical temperature stability. Main conclusions: Our results confirm the results of previous macroecological studies of interaction networks which have highlighted the importance of species richness and the environment in determining network structure. Additionally, for the first time, we report an association between network structure and species phylogenetic signal at a macroecological scale, indicating that high specialization and modularity are associated with high interspecific competition among closely related hummingbirds, subdividing the floral niche. This suggests a tighter co-evolutionary association between hummingbirds and their plants than in previously studied plant-bird mutualistic systems. © 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
DOI: 10.1111/geb.12355
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