Effects of life-history traits and network topological characteristics on the robustness of marine food webs
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/26172Date
2022-02-08Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Merillet, Laurene; Robert, Marianne; Hernvann, Pierre-Yves; Pecuchet, Laurene; Pavoine, Sandrine; Mouchet, Maud; Primicerio, Raul; Kopp, DorothéeAbstract
Management targets for biodiversity preservation are shifting from individual species to an
ecosystem-wide focus. Indeed, the perturbation analysis of interaction networks, such as food
webs, better captures the response of biodiversity to environmental pressures than single-species
considerations. Here we propose a framework that examines food web robustness to a given
perturbation based on life history traits and the topology of the food web, at different scales: local
(species), intermediate (species directly linked together by a trophic interaction), and global (food
web). Applying this framework to the Celtic Sea, a historically exploited fishing ground, we
showed that the species sensitive to fishing were not the most central (i.e. with many interaction
links, estimated based on eigenvector centrality) and that there is no both highly sensitive and
exposed species to fishing. We then investigated how the loss of central, sensitive and exposed
species to fishing could impact the robustness of the food web. We showed that the food web was
the least robust to the simulated loss of species with many predators (i.e. forage species) and most
exposed to fishing pressure, indicating that conservation priority could be focused on these
species. Estimating species’ sensitivity to fishing was insufficient to predict food web robustness
since the simulated removal of the most sensitive species led to a robustness level similar to that
of a random removal sequence. Unlike what is often documented, the network appeared relatively
robust to the simulated loss of the most central species, due notably to their implication in
redundant trophic interactions and the fact that their disappearance increases modularity. This
suggests that species-level metrics such as centrality should be completed by analysis at the scale
of the whole food web to prioritize species conservation.
Publisher
ElsevierCitation
Merillet, Robert, Hernvann, Pecuchet, Pavoine, Mouchet, Primicerio, Kopp. Effects of life-history traits and network topological characteristics on the robustness of marine food webs. Global Ecology and Conservation. 2022;34Metadata
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