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Network structure and biodiversity loss in food webs: robustness increases with connectance
Dunne, J.A.; Williams, R.J.; Martinez, N.D. (2002). Network structure and biodiversity loss in food webs: robustness increases with connectance. Ecol. Lett. 5(4): 558-567. https://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1461-0248.2002.00354.x
In: Ecology Letters. Blackwell: Oxford. ISSN 1461-023X; e-ISSN 1461-0248, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Biodiversity
    Robustness
    Topology
Author keywords
    connectance, ecosystem function, food web, network structure, secondary extinctions, species loss, species richness

Authors  Top 
  • Dunne, J.A.
  • Williams, R.J.
  • Martinez, N.D.

Abstract
    Food-web structure mediates dramatic effects of biodiversity loss including secondary and `cascading' extinctions. We studied these effects by simulating primary species loss in 16 food webs from terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems and measuring robustness in terms of the secondary extinctions that followed. As observed in other networks, food webs are more robust to random removal of species than to selective removal of species with the most trophic links to other species. More surprisingly, robustness increases with food-web connectance but appears independent of species richness and omnivory. In particular, food webs experience `rivet-like' thresholds past which they display extreme sensitivity to removal of highly connected species. Higher connectance delays the onset of this threshold. Removing species with few trophic connections generally has little effect though there are several striking exceptions. These findings emphasize how the number of species removed affects ecosystems differently depending on the trophic functions of species removed.

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