Abstract

The dynamics of wildlife populations often depend heavily on interspecific interactions and understanding the underlying principles can be an important step in designing conservation strategies. Behavioural ecological studies can here provide useful insights into the structure and function of communities and their likely response to environmental changes. In this study of the Masai Mara herbivore community, we use a social network approach to investigate social affinities between species and how these change over the year in response to seasonal changes in ecological conditions. We find that even though social networks were correlated across different ecological conditions, for half the species dyads in the community, the strength of social affinities responded to changes in rainfall and/or the presence of migratory wildebeest. Several species consequentially adopted more or less central positions in the network depending on the ecological conditions. The findings point out interspecific social links that are likely to be attenuated or strengthened as a consequence of human-induced environmental changes and therefore call for particular attention from conservation managers. The eco-evolutionary ramifications of the perturbations of social affinities still require further study.This article is part of the theme issue ‘Linking behaviour to dynamics of populations and communities: application of novel approaches in behavioural ecology to conservation’.

Highlights

  • Mixed-species groups (MSGs) constitute an integral part of the structure and function of many communities, and understanding the principles underlying their formation can be of relevance to natural resource management

  • Passerine birds in Britain have been shown to benefit from increased information about foraging opportunities in MSGs [4], coral fish dilute individual predation risk in MSGs in which they benefit from interspecific social mimicry [5], and Amazonian primates in MSGs benefit from complementary predator detection abilities of the different species [6]

  • Our study reveals that the social affinities of all the study species from the African savannah herbivore community were affected by changes in ecological conditions

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Summary

Background

Mixed-species groups (MSGs) constitute an integral part of the structure and function of many communities, and understanding the principles underlying their formation can be of relevance to natural resource management. Where entirely novel conditions outside the natural range are expected, the social patterns most likely to emerge may be hinted at by extrapolation based on correlations between social affinities and environmental variables within the natural range. Such changes in social constellations may have both ecological and evolutionary consequences [32,33]. Focusing on the dozen most common herbivores in the system, we here use a social network approach to tease apart how environmental changes affect the propensity of individual species to form MSGs, the social affinities within specific species-dyads, and the overall centrality of individual species in the network structure

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51. Oksanen J et al 2019 vegan: community ecology
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