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Community‐level demographic consequences of urbanization: an ecological network approach
Author(s) -
Rodewald Amanda D.,
Rohr Rudolf P.,
Fortuna Miguel A.,
Bascompte Jordi
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of animal ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.134
H-Index - 157
eISSN - 1365-2656
pISSN - 0021-8790
DOI - 10.1111/1365-2656.12224
Subject(s) - species evenness , urbanization , ecology , ecological network , geography , population , nest (protein structural motif) , predation , community , biology , interspecific competition , ecosystem , demography , species richness , sociology , biochemistry
SummaryEcological networks are known to influence ecosystem attributes, but we poorly understand how interspecific network structure affect population demography of multiple species, particularly for vertebrates. Establishing the link between network structure and demography is at the crux of being able to use networks to understand population dynamics and to inform conservation. We addressed the critical but unanswered question, does network structure explain demographic consequences of urbanization? We studied 141 ecological networks representing interactions between plants and nesting birds in forests across an urbanization gradient in O hio, USA , from 2001 to 2011. Nest predators were identified by video‐recording nests and surveyed from 2004 to 2011. As landscapes urbanized, bird–plant networks were more nested, less compartmentalized and dominated by strong interactions between a few species (i.e. low evenness). Evenness of interaction strengths promoted avian nest survival, and evenness explained demography better than urbanization, level of invasion, numbers of predators or other qualitative network metrics. Highly uneven networks had approximately half the nesting success as the most even networks. Thus, nest survival reflected how urbanization altered species interactions, particularly with respect to how nest placement affected search efficiency of predators. The demographic effects of urbanization were not direct, but were filtered through bird–plant networks. This study illustrates how network structure can influence demography at the community level and further, that knowledge of species interactions and a network approach may be requisite to understanding demographic responses to environmental change.

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