Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/17840
Title: Effects of dam-induced landscape fragmentation on amazonian ant-plant mutualistic networks
Authors: Emer, Carine
Venticinque, Eduardo Martins
Fonseca, Carlos Roberto
Keywords: Ant
Compartmentalization
Dam
Ecosystem Function
Edge Effect
Extinction
Habitat Fragmentation
Habitat Loss
Landscape Change
Mutualism
Myrmecophyte
Nestedness
Plant Insect Interaction
Species Diversity
Species Richness
Tropical Forest
Anidamiento
Animals
Ant
Cambio De Hábitat
Coextinción
Coextinction
Compartimentación
Compartmentalization
Demography
Ecosystem
Edge Effect
Efecto De Borde
Environmental Protection
Habitat Change
Habitat Loss
Interacción De Especies
Mirmecofita
Myrmecophyte
Nestedness
Pérdida De Hábitat
Physiology
Plant
River
Species Difference
Species Interaction
Statistical Model
Symbiosis
Tree
Anidamiento
Cambio De Hábitat
Coextinción
Coextinction
Compartimentación
Compartmentalization
Edge Effect
Efecto De Borde
Habitat Change
Habitat Loss
Interacción De Especies
Mirmecofita
Myrmecophyte
Nestedness
Pérdida De Hábitat
Species Interaction
Animal
Ants
Conservation Of Natural Resources
Demography
Ecosystem
Linear Models
Plants
Rivers
Species Specificity
Symbiosis
Trees
Amazonas
Balbina Reservoir
Animalsia
Formicidae
Issue Date: 2013
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Conservation Biology
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 27, Número 4, Pags. 763-773
Abstract: Mutualistic networks are critical to biological diversity maintenance; however, their structures and functionality may be threatened by a swiftly changing world. In the Amazon, the increasing number of dams poses a large threat to biological diversity because they greatly alter and fragment the surrounding landscape. Tight coevolutionary interactions typical of tropical forests, such as the ant-myrmecophyte mutualism, where the myrmecophyte plants provide domatia nesting space to their symbiotic ants, may be jeopardized by the landscape changes caused by dams. We analyzed 31 ant-myrmecophyte mutualistic networks in undisturbed and disturbed sites surrounding Balbina, the largest Central Amazonian dam. We tested how ant-myrmecophyte networks differ among dam-induced islands, lake edges, and undisturbed forests in terms of species richness, composition, structure, and robustness (number of species remaining in the network after partner extinctions). We also tested how landscape configuration in terms of area, isolation, shape, and neighborhood alters the structure of the ant-myrmecophyte networks on islands. Ant-myrmecophytic networks were highly compartmentalized in undisturbed forests, and the compartments had few strongly connected mutualistic partners. In contrast, networks at lake edges and on islands were not compartmentalized and were negatively affected by island area and isolation in terms of species richness, density, and composition. Habitat loss and fragmentation led to coextinction cascades that contributed to the elimination of entire ant-plant compartments. Furthermore, many myrmecophytic plants in disturbed sites lost their mutualistic ant partners or were colonized by opportunistic, nonspecialized ants. Robustness of ant-myrmecophyte networks on islands was lower than robustness near lake edges and in undisturbed forest and was particularly susceptible to the extinction of plants. Beyond the immediate habitat loss caused by the building of large dams in Amazonia, persistent edge effects and habitat fragmentation associated with dams had large negative effects on animal-plant mutualistic networks. © 2013 Society for Conservation Biology.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1111/cobi.12045
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