Authors
Fernanda S Valdovinos, Berry J Brosi, Heather M Briggs, Pablo Moisset de Espanés, Rodrigo Ramos‐Jiliberto, Neo D Martinez
Publication date
2016/10/1
Journal
Ecology Letters
Volume
19
Issue
10
Pages
1277-1286
Description
Much research debates whether properties of ecological networks such as nestedness and connectance stabilise biological communities while ignoring key behavioural aspects of organisms within these networks. Here, we computationally assess how adaptive foraging (AF) behaviour interacts with network architecture to determine the stability of plant–pollinator networks. We find that AF reverses negative effects of nestedness and positive effects of connectance on the stability of the networks by partitioning the niches among species within guilds. This behaviour enables generalist pollinators to preferentially forage on the most specialised of their plant partners which increases the pollination services to specialist plants and cedes the resources of generalist plants to specialist pollinators. We corroborate these behavioural preferences with intensive field observations of bee foraging. Our results show that …
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