Abstract

The assessment of the relationship between species diversity, species interactions and environmental characteristics is indispensable for understanding network architecture and ecological distribution in complex networks. Saproxylic insect communities inhabiting tree hollow microhabitats within Mediterranean woodlands are highly dependent on woodland configuration and on microhabitat supply they harbor, so can be studied under the network analysis perspective. We assessed the differences in interacting patterns according to woodland site, and analysed the importance of functional species in modelling network architecture. We then evaluated their implications for saproxylic assemblages’ persistence, through simulations of three possible scenarios of loss of tree hollow microhabitat. Tree hollow-saproxylic insect networks per woodland site presented a significant nested pattern. Those woodlands with higher complexity of tree individuals and tree hollow microhabitats also housed higher species/interactions diversity and complexity of saproxylic networks, and exhibited a higher degree of nestedness, suggesting that a higher woodland complexity positively influences saproxylic diversity and interaction complexity, thus determining higher degree of nestedness. Moreover, the number of insects acting as key interconnectors (nodes falling into the core region, using core/periphery tests) was similar among woodland sites, but the species identity varied on each. Such differences in insect core composition among woodland sites suggest the functional role they depict at woodland scale. Tree hollows acting as core corresponded with large tree hollows near the ground and simultaneously housing various breeding microsites, whereas core insects were species mediating relevant ecological interactions within saproxylic communities, e.g. predation, competitive or facilitation interactions. Differences in network patterns and tree hollow characteristics among woodland sites clearly defined different sensitivity to microhabitat loss, and higher saproxylic diversity and woodland complexity showed positive relation with robustness. These results highlight that woodland complexity goes hand in hand with biotic and ecological complexity of saproxylic networks, and together exhibited positive effects on network robustness.

Highlights

  • The incidence matrix of different species on different habitats exhibits specialized or nonrandom patterns of occurrences, such as nestedness [1,2,3,4] or modularity [5,6]

  • We addressed the following questions: 1) Does the tree hollow-saproxylic interaction present specialized patterns at woodland scale? 2) Are there differences in the interacting patterns among woodland sites and which features are responsible of such differences? 3) How network properties are related with resistance to microhabitat loss?

  • We recorded 3926 individuals of Coleoptera belonging to 155 species and 39 families, and 461 individuals of Syrphidae belonging to 22 species (S1 Table)

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Summary

Introduction

The incidence matrix of different species on different habitats exhibits specialized or nonrandom patterns of occurrences, such as nestedness [1,2,3,4] or modularity [5,6]. Their study may help to understand the ecological mechanisms underlying them and shed light on the relationship between interaction complexity and persistence [11,12,13]. Trophic interactions with different outcomes for participant species or individuals across habitats in geographic space, determine network architecture resulting in different topologies and network persistence [10]. The mechanisms modelling network architecture and its relation with persistence are still scarcely understood in food webs describing species occurrences in geographic space, and the methodology available for classic networks of interaction between species may be helpful in this regard

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