# Deciphering Probabilistic Species Interaction Networks

**Authors:** Francis Banville, Tanya Strydom, Penelope S. A. Blyth, Chris Brimacombe, Michael D. Catchen, Gabriel Dansereau, Gracielle Higino, Thomas Malpas, Hana Mayall, Kari Norman, Dominique Gravel, Timothée Poisot

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/ele.70161 · 2025-06-26

## TL;DR

This paper explores how to better understand and represent uncertainties in species interactions using probabilistic networks at different spatial scales.

## Contribution

The paper introduces a framework to distinguish between local interaction realizations and metaweb feasibility, highlighting biases in inferring interactions.

## Key findings

- Local networks and metawebs differ in their spatial and temporal scaling of interactions.
- Systematic biases arise when inferring local networks directly from metawebs.
- Rigorous descriptions of probabilistic interactions should include conditional variables and uncertainty sources.

## Abstract

Representing species interactions probabilistically as opposed to deterministically conveys uncertainties in our knowledge of interactions. The sources of uncertainty captured by interaction probabilities depend on the method used to evaluate them: uncertainty of predictive models, subjective assessment of experts, or empirical measurement of interaction spatiotemporal variability. However, guidelines for the estimation and documentation of probabilistic interaction data are lacking. This is concerning because our understanding of interaction probabilities depend on their sometimes elusive definition and uncertainty sources. We review how probabilistic interactions are defined at different spatial scales. These definitions are based on the distinction between the realisation of an interaction at a specific time and space (local networks) and its biological or ecological feasibility (metaweb). Using host–parasite interactions in Europe, we illustrate how these two network representations differ in their statistical properties, specifically: how local networks and metawebs differ in their spatial and temporal scaling of interactions. We present two approaches to inferring binary interactions from probabilistic ones that account for these differences and show that systematic biases arise when directly inferring local networks from metawebs. Our results underscore the importance of more rigorous descriptions of probabilistic species interactions that specify their conditional variables and uncertainty sources.

We review how probabilistic species interactions are defined at different spatial scales. These definitions are based on the distinction between the realisation of an interaction at a specific time and space (local networks) and its biological or ecological feasibility (metaweb). Using host–parasite interactions in Europe, we illustrate how these two network representations differ in their statistical properties, specifically: how local networks and metawebs differ in their spatial and temporal scaling of interactions.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Salix (willows, genus) [taxon 40685], Myopus schisticolor (wood lemming, species) [taxon 71003], Crotalus atrox (western diamondback rattlesnake, species) [taxon 8730]

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12200232/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12200232