High temporal variability in the occurrence of consumer-resource interactions in ecological networks
Daniela N. Lopez, Patricio A. Camus, Nelson Valdivia, Sergio A., Estay

TL;DR
This study reveals that consumer-resource interactions in marine ecological networks are highly variable over time, with most interactions being transient, challenging the traditional view of static ecological communities.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence of low temporal persistence in ecological interactions and highlights the importance of considering temporal variability in ecological network analysis.
Findings
Most interactions had low temporal persistence.
A common exponential decay pattern described interaction rank-frequency.
Low-frequency interactions contributed to site similarity.
Abstract
Ecological networks are theoretical abstractions that represent ecological communities. These networks are usually defined as static entities, in which the occurrence of a particular interaction between species is considered fixed despite the intrinsic dynamics of ecological systems. However, empirical analysis of the temporal variation of trophic interactions is constrained by the lack of data with high spatial, temporal, and taxonomic resolution. Here, we evaluate the spatiotemporal variability of multiple consumer-resource interactions of large marine networks. The tropic interactions of all of the analyzed networks had low temporal persistence, which was well described by a common exponential decay in the rank-frequency relationship of consumer-resource interactions. This common pattern of low temporal persistence was evident despite the dissimilarities of environmental conditions…
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