The role of phenotypic plasticity in shaping ecological networks
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Gómez, José M.; González Megías, Adela; Armas, Cristina; Narbona López, Eduardo; Perfectti Álvarez, FranciscoEditorial
Wiley
Materia
Ecological networks Interaction niche Interaction strength intraspecific trait variation Niche breadth expansion Niche shift Network plasticity Phenotypic plasticity
Fecha
2023-10-13Referencia bibliográfica
Gómez, J. M., González‐Megías, A., Armas, C., Narbona, E., Navarro, L., & Perfectti, F. (2023). The role of phenotypic plasticity in shaping ecological networks. Ecology Letters, 26, S47-S61.[10.1111/ele.14192][DOI: 10.1111/ele.14192]
Patrocinador
Junta de Andalucía, Grant/Award Number: P18-FR- 3641; Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities; Grant/Award Number: PID2020-116222GB- 100; PID2021-126456NBResumen
Plasticity-mediated
changes in interaction dynamics and structure may scale
up and affect the ecological network in which the plastic species are embedded.
Despite their potential relevance for understanding the effects of plasticity on
ecological communities, these effects have seldom been analysed. We argue here
that, by boosting the magnitude of intra-individual
phenotypic variation, plasticity
may have three possible direct effects on the interactions that the plastic species
maintains with other species in the community: may expand the interaction niche,
may cause a shift from one interaction niche to another or may even cause the
colonization of a new niche. The combined action of these three factors can scale
to the community level and eventually expresses itself as a modification in the
topology and functionality of the entire ecological network. We propose that this
causal pathway can be more widespread than previously thought and may explain
how interaction niches evolve quickly in response to rapid changes in environmental
conditions. The implication of this idea is not solely eco-evolutionary
but may also
help to understand how ecological interactions rewire and evolve in response to
global change