English

Phylogenetic Proximity and Nestedness in Mutualistic Ecosystems

Populations and Evolution 2010-08-02 v1

Abstract

We investigate how the pattern of contacts between species in mutualistic ecosystems is affected by the phylogenetic proximity between the species of each guild. We develop several theoretical tools to measure that effect and we use them to examine some real mutualistic sytems. We aim at establishing the role of such proximity in the emergence of a nested pattern of contacts. We conclude that although phylogenetic proximity is compatible with nestedness it can not be claimed to determine it. We find that nestedness can instead be attributed to a general rule by which species tend to behave as generalists holding contacts with counterparts that already have a large number of contacts. A nested ecosystem generated by this rule, shows high phylogenetic diversity. This is to say, the counterparts of species having similar degrees are not phylogenetic neighbours.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1007.5519,
  title  = {Phylogenetic Proximity and Nestedness in Mutualistic Ecosystems},
  author = {R. P. J. Perazzo and Laura Hernández and Horacio Ceva and Enrique Burgos and José Ignacio Alvarez-Hamelin},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1007.5519},
  year   = {2010}
}

Comments

12 pages, 7 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T15:55:18.276Z