Emergence of structural and dynamical properties of ecological mutualistic networks
Samir Suweis, Filippo Simini, Jayanth R. Banavar, Amos Maritan

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that the nested structure of ecological mutualistic networks can emerge from an optimization principle aimed at maximizing species abundance, linking network structure, species abundance, and resilience.
Contribution
It introduces a unifying analytical and numerical framework showing how mutualistic interactions lead to nested network structures and influence community stability and resilience.
Findings
Nestedness correlates with species abundance and mutualistic strength.
Optimized networks are stable but less resilient than random networks.
Rare species abundance is directly linked to community resilience.
Abstract
Mutualistic networks are formed when the interactions between two classes of species are mutually beneficial. They are important examples of cooperation shaped by evolution. Mutualism between animals and plants plays a key role in the organization of ecological communities. Such networks in ecology have generically evolved a nested architecture independent of species composition and latitude - specialists interact with proper subsets of the nodes with whom generalists interact. Despite sustained efforts to explain observed network structure on the basis of community-level stability or persistence, such correlative studies have reached minimal consensus. Here we demonstrate that nested interaction networks could emerge as a consequence of an optimization principle aimed at maximizing the species abundance in mutualistic communities. Using analytical and numerical approaches, we show that…
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