Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

An individual‐based model for the eco‐evolutionary emergence of bipartite interaction networks

2020; Wiley; Volume: 23; Issue: 11 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/ele.13592

ISSN

1461-0248

Autores

Odile Maliet, Nicolas Loeuille, Hélène Morlon,

Tópico(s)

Animal Ecology and Behavior Studies

Resumo

Abstract How ecological interaction networks emerge on evolutionary time scales remains unclear. Here we build an individual‐based eco‐evolutionary model for the emergence of mutualistic, antagonistic and neutral bipartite interaction networks. Exploring networks evolved under these scenarios, we find three main results. First, antagonistic interactions tend to foster species and trait diversity, while mutualistic interactions reduce diversity. Second, antagonistic interactors evolve higher specialisation, which results in networks that are often more modular than neutral ones; resource species in these networks often display phylogenetic conservatism in interaction partners. Third, mutualistic interactions lead to networks that are more nested than neutral ones, with low phylogenetic conservatism in interaction partners. These results tend to match overall empirical trends, demonstrating that structures of empirical networks that have most often been explained by ecological processes can result from an evolutionary emergence. Our model contributes to the ongoing effort of better integrating ecological interactions and macroevolution.

Referência(s)