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A Probabilistic View of Forbidden Links: Their Prevalence and Their Consequences for the Robustness of Plant–Hummingbird Communities

  • François Duchenne
  • , Elisa Barreto
  • , Esteban A. Guevara
  • , Holger Beck
  • , Carolina Bello
  • , Rafaela Bobato
  • , Daniela Bôlla
  • , Emanuel Brenes
  • , Nicole Büttner
  • , Ana P. Caron
  • , Nelson Chaves-Elizondo
  • , María J. Gavilanes
  • , Alejandro Restrepo-González
  • , Jose Alejandro Castro
  • , Miriam Kaehler
  • , Tiago Machado-de-Souza
  • , Miguel Machnicki-Reis
  • , Andrés Sebastián F. Marcayata
  • , Cauã G. de Menezes
  • , Andrea Nieto
  • Rafael de Oliveira, Ricardo A.C. de Oliveira, Friederike Richter, Bryan G. Rojas, Luciele L. Romanowski, Wellinton L. de Souza, Danila S. Veluza, Ben Weinstein, Rafael O. Wüest, Thais B. Zanata, Krystal Zuniga, María A. Maglianesi, Tatiana Santander, Isabela G. Varassin, Catherine H. Graham
  • Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research
  • Estación Biológica de Doñana (EBD-CSIC)
  • Santa Lucia Cloud Forest Reserve
  • ETH (Department of Environmental Systems Science)
  • Universidade Federal do Paraná
  • Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia
  • Universidad Estatal a Distancia
  • Un poco del Chocó — Reserve and Biological Station
  • Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad INABIO (Investigador Asociado)
  • Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre (BiK-F)
  • State Museum of Natural History Stuttgart
  • Stiftung Naturschutz Berlin
  • Universidad del Azuay
  • University of Florida
  • Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso
  • Aves y Conservación (BirdLife Ecuador)

Research output: Contribution to journalLetterpeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

The presence in ecological communities of unfeasible species interactions, termed forbidden links, due to physiological or morphological exploitation barriers has been long debated, but little direct evidence has been found. Forbidden links are likely to make ecological communities less robust to species extinctions, stressing the need to assess their prevalence. Here, we used a dataset of plant–hummingbird interactions, coupled with a Bayesian hierarchical model, to assess the importance of exploitation barriers in determining species interactions. We found evidence for exploitation barriers between flowers and hummingbirds across the 32 studied communities; however, the proportion of forbidden links changed drastically among communities because of changes in trait distributions. The higher the proportion of forbidden links, the more they decreased network robustness because of constraints on interaction rewiring. Our results suggest that exploitation barriers are not rare in plant–hummingbird communities and have the potential to limit the rescue of species experiencing partner extinction.

Translated title of the contributionUna visión probabilística de los vínculos prohibidos: su prevalencia y sus consecuencias para la robustez de las comunidades de plantas y colibríes
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere70073
JournalEcology Letters
Volume28
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • exploitation barrier
  • forbidden link
  • linkage rule
  • mutualism
  • sparsity
  • stability
  • trait matching

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