Title of article :
Increasing the extinction risk of highly connected species causes a sharp robust-to-fragile transition in empirical food webs
Author/Authors :
Bellingeri، نويسنده , , Michele and Cassi، نويسنده , , Davide and Vincenzi، نويسنده , , Simone، نويسنده ,
Pages :
8
From page :
1
To page :
8
Abstract :
Random removal and the attack from most- to least-connected node (i.e. species) are the two limit criteria for sequential extinction of species in food webs, but a continuum of possibilities exists between them. simulations to test the robustness of 14 empirical food webs to species loss by varying a parameter I (intentionality) that defines the removal probability (extinction risk) of species with high number of trophic connections. The removal probability of highly connected species increases with I. We found that food web robustness decreases slowly when the extinction risk of highly connected species increases (we call this region random removal regime), until a threshold value of I is reached. For greater values of the threshold, we found a dramatic reduction in robustness with increasing intentionality in almost all the food webs (intentional attack regime). ense networks were more robust to an increase of I. Larger food webs (i.e. higher species richness) were more sensitive (i.e. robustness decreased faster) to the increase of extinction risk of highly connected species. The existence of a clear transition in system behaviour has relevant consequences for the interpretation of extinction patterns in ecosystems and prioritizing species for conservation planning.
Keywords :
Complex biological networks , Food web robustness , Scale-free networks , extinction risk
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics
Record number :
2086634
Link To Document :
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