Throughflow centrality is a global indicator of the functional importance of species in ecosystems
Stuart R. Borrett

TL;DR
This paper introduces throughflow centrality as a global indicator of species importance in ecosystems, linking it to social science concepts and demonstrating its effectiveness through analysis of empirical ecosystem models.
Contribution
It establishes throughflow as a global centrality measure and connects it with Hubbell status, enabling broader network science applications in ecology.
Findings
A small fraction of components account for most system activity.
Most dominant nodes are primary producers, bacteria, or dead organic matter.
Throughflow centrality reveals power concentration in ecosystems.
Abstract
To better understand and manage complex systems like ecosystems it is critical to know the relative contribution of system components to system functioning. Ecologists and social scientists have described many ways that individuals can be important; This paper makes two key contributions to this research area. First, it shows that throughflow, the total energy-matter entering or exiting a system component, is a global indicator of the relative contribution of the component to the whole system activity. It is global because it includes the direct and indirect exchanges among community members. Further, throughflow is a special case of Hubbell status as defined in social science. This recognition effectively joins the concepts, enabling ecologists to use and build on the broader centrality research in network science. Second, I characterize the distribution of throughflow in 45…
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