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The influence of biogeographical and evolutionary histories on morphological trait‐matching and resource specialization in mutualistic hummingbird–plant networks

Authors :
Isabela Galarda Varassin
María Alejandra Maglianesi
Paulo Eugênio Oliveira
Erich Fischer
Oscar H. Marín-Gómez
Tiago S. Malucelli
Marcelo Ferreira de Vasconcelos
Silvana Buzato
Mónica B. Ramírez-Burbano
Ana M. Rui
Glauco Kohler
Ana M. Martín González
Stella Watts
Juan Francisco Ornelas
Ivan Sazima
Ruben Alarcón
Carlos Lara
Stefan Abrahamczyk
Boris A. Tinoco
Severino Mendes de Azevedo-Júnior
Raúl Ortiz-Pulido
Manoel Martins Dias Filho
Pietro K. Maruyama
Steffani Najara de Pinho Queiroz
Peter A. Cotton
Flor Maria Guedes Las-Casas
Thais B. Zanata
Andréa Cardoso Araujo
Katrine B. Hansen
Carsten Rahbek
André Rodrigo Rech
Jesper Sonne
Vanessa Martínez-García
Ruth Partida-Lara
Jonathan D. Kennedy
Licléia C. Rodrigues
Francielle Paulina de Araújo
Matthias Schleuning
Bo Dalsgaard
Blanca Itzel Patiño-González
Román Díaz-Valenzuela
Márcia A. Rocca
Marlies Sazima
Paula L. Enríquez
Caio Graco Machado
Edvaldo Nunes da Silva Neto
Benno I. Simmons
Jeferson Vizentin-Bugoni
Adriana O. Machado
Liliana Rosero-Lasprilla
Aline Góes Coelho
Edgar Chávez-González
Maria F. Dufke
Source :
Dalsgaard, B, Maruyama, P K, Sonne, J, Hansen, K, Zanata, T B, Abrahamczyk, S, Alarcon, R, Araujo, A C, Araujo, F P, Buzato, S, Chavez-Gonzalez, E, Coelho, A G, Cotton, P A, Diaz-Valenzuela, R, Dufke, M F, Enriquez, P L, Martins Dias Filho, M, Fischer, E, Kohler, G, Lara, C, Las-Casas, F M G, Rosero Lasprilla, L, Machado, A O, Machado, C G, Maglianesi, M A, Malucelli, T S, Marin-Gomez, O H, Martinez-Garcia, V, Mendes de Azevedo-Junior, S, da Silva Neto, E N, Oliveira, P E, Ornelas, J F, Ortiz-Pulido, R, Partida-Lara, R, Patino-Gonzalez, B I, Najara de Pinho Queiroz, S, Ramirez-Burbano, M B, Rodrigo Rech, A, Rocca, M A, Rodrigues, L C, Rui, A M, Sazima, I, Sazima, M, Simmons, B I, Tinoco, B A, Varassin, I G, Vasconcelos, M F, Vizentin-Bugoni, J, Watts, S, Kennedy, J D, Rahbek, C, Schleuning, M & Martin Gonzalez, A M 2021, ' The influence of biogeographical and evolutionary histories on morphological trait-matching and resource specialization in mutualistic hummingbird-plant networks ', Functional Ecology, vol. 35, no. 5, pp. 1120-1133 . https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2435.13784, Dalsgaard, B, Maruyama, P K, Sonne, J, Hansen, K, Zanata, T B, Abrahamczyk, S, Alarcón, R, Araujo, A C, Araújo, F P, Buzato, S, Chávez-González, E, Coelho, A G, Cotton, P A, Díaz-Valenzuela, R, Dufke, M F, Enríquez, P L, Martins Dias Filho, M, Fischer, E, Kohler, G, Lara, C, Las-Casas, F M G, Rosero Lasprilla, L, Machado, A O, Machado, C G, Maglianesi, M A, Malucelli, T S, Marín-Gómez, O H, Martínez-García, V, Mendes de Azevedo-Júnior, S, da Silva Neto, E N, Oliveira, P E, Ornelas, J F, Ortiz-Pulido, R, Partida-Lara, R, Patiño-González, B I, Najara de Pinho Queiroz, S, Ramírez-Burbano, M B, Rodrigo Rech, A, Rocca, M A, Rodrigues, L C, Rui, A M, Sazima, I, Sazima, M, Simmons, B I, Tinoco, B A, Varassin, I G, Vasconcelos, M F, Vizentin-Bugoni, J, Watts, S, Kennedy, J D, Rahbek, C, Schleuning, M & Martín González, A M 2021, ' The influence of biogeographical and evolutionary histories on morphological trait-matching and resource specialization in mutualistic hummingbird–plant networks ', Functional Ecology, vol. 35, no. 5, pp. 1120-1133 . https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2435.13784, Repositório Institucional da USP (Biblioteca Digital da Produção Intelectual), Universidade de São Paulo (USP), instacron:USP
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Functional traits can determine pairwise species interactions, such as those between plants and pollinators. However, the effects of biogeography and evolutionary history on trait-matching and trait-mediated resource specialization remain poorly understood.We compiled a database of 93 mutualistic hummingbird-plant networks (including 181 hummingbird and 1,256 plant species), complemented by morphological measures of hummingbird bill and floral corolla length. We divided the hummingbirds into their principal clades and used knowledge on hummingbird biogeography to divide the networks into four biogeographical regions: Lowland South America, Andes, North & Central America, and the Caribbean islands. We then tested: (a) whether hummingbird clades and biogeographical regions differ in hummingbird bill length, corolla length of visited flowers and resource specialization, and (b) whether hummingbirds' bill length correlates with the corolla length of their food plants and with their level of resource specialization.Hummingbird clades dominated by long-billed species generally visited longer flowers and were the most exclusive in their resource use. Bill and corolla length and the degree of resource specialization were similar across mainland regions, but the Caribbean islands had shorter flowers and hummingbirds with more generalized interaction niches. Bill and corolla length correlated in all regions and most clades, that is, trait-matching was a recurrent phenomenon in hummingbird-plant associations. In contrast, bill length did not generally mediate resource specialization, as bill length was only weakly correlated with resource specialization within one hummingbird clade (Brilliants) and in the regions of Lowland South America and the Andes in which plants and hummingbirds have a long co-evolutionary history. Supplementary analyses including bill curvature confirmed that bill morphology (length and curvature) does not in general predict resource specialization.These results demonstrate how biogeographical and evolutionary histories can modulate the effects of functional traits on species interactions, and that traits better predict functional groups of interaction partners (i.e. trait-matching) than resource specialization. These findings reveal that functional traits have great potential, but also key limitations, as a tool for developing more mechanistic approaches in community ecology.A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article.

Details

ISSN :
13652435 and 02698463
Volume :
35
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Functional Ecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7968cfd57475b43ccc880efbea8b22e8