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Fruit traits and temporal abundance shape plant-frugivore interaction networks in a seasonal tropical forest
Authors:Michelle Ramos-Robles  Wesley Dáttilo  Cecilia Díaz-Castelazo  Ellen Andresen
Affiliation:1.Red de Interacciones Multitróficas,Instituto de Ecología, A. C.,Xalapa,Mexico;2.Centro de Investigación en Biodiversidad y Conservación,Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Morelos,Cuernavaca,Mexico;3.Red de Ecoetología,Instituto de Ecología, A. C., Xalapa,Xalapa,Mexico;4.Instituto de Investigaciones en Ecosistemas y Sustentabilidad,Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México,Morelia,Mexico
Abstract:Interactions between fleshy fruited plants and frugivores are crucial for the structuring and functioning of biotic communities, particularly in tropical forests where both groups are diverse and play different roles in network organization. However, it remains poorly understood how different groups of frugivore species and fruit traits contribute to network structure. We recorded interactions among 28 plant species and three groups of frugivores (birds, bats, and non-flying mammals) in a seasonal forest in Mexico to determine which species contribute more to network structure and evaluate the importance of each species. We also determined whether fruit abundance, water content, morphology traits, and fruiting phenology are related to network parameters: the number of interactions, species contribution to nestedness, and species strength. We found that plants did not depend on a single group of frugivores, but rather on one species of each group: the bird Pitangus sulphuratus, the bat Sturnira parvidens, and the non-flying mammal Procyon lotor. The abundance, size, and water content of the fruits were significantly related to the contribution to nestedness, number of interactions, and species strength index of plant species. Tree species and birds contributed mainly to the nested structure of the network. We show that the structure of plant-frugivore networks in this seasonal forest is non-random and that fruit traits (i.e., abundance, phenology, size, and water content) are important factors shaping plant-frugivore networks. Identification of the key species and their traits that maintain the complex structure of species interactions is therefore fundamental for the integral conservation of tropical forests.
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