2009
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2008.0335
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Keystone species and food webs

Abstract: Different species are of different importance in maintaining ecosystem functions in natural communities. Quantitative approaches are needed to identify unusually important or influential, 'keystone' species particularly for conservation purposes. Since the importance of some species may largely be the consequence of their rich interaction structure, one possible quantitative approach to identify the most influential species is to study their position in the network of interspecific interactions. In this paper,… Show more

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Cited by 232 publications
(212 citation statements)
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References 79 publications
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“…Although a traditional zooarchaeological study would certainly note the presence or absence of species (91), food-web approaches additionally allow us to examine the effects of species additions and removals on the ecosystem as a whole (92). These approaches also allow for detection of keystone species via centrality measures (93). Finally, by displaying the patterns in large datasets, they provide a source for inferences about the processes creating the food web and allow for synthesis of large amounts of information (90).…”
Section: Climate and The Spread Of Farming In Asiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although a traditional zooarchaeological study would certainly note the presence or absence of species (91), food-web approaches additionally allow us to examine the effects of species additions and removals on the ecosystem as a whole (92). These approaches also allow for detection of keystone species via centrality measures (93). Finally, by displaying the patterns in large datasets, they provide a source for inferences about the processes creating the food web and allow for synthesis of large amounts of information (90).…”
Section: Climate and The Spread Of Farming In Asiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Then, it is not rare that concepts arising in one discipline are rediscovered and used in another with success. For instance, the concept of node centrality [18,32], which arises in the study of social networks, is now widely used in the analysis of biological, ecological, and infrastructural networks [5,7,9,11,13,21,22]. Another example is given by the Wiener index, which was introduced in 1947 [34] and defined as the sum of the distances of all shortest paths in the graph representing hydrocarbon molecules.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other approaches to ecological network analysis have been published elsewhere such as investigation of food webs (Dunne et al 2002(Dunne et al , 2004Christian & Luczkovich 1999), pollination networks (Bascompte et al 2003;Olesen et al 2007), and keystone species (Jordan 2009;Jordan et al 2009;Ortiz et al 2013) to mention a few. Here, I provide an overview of flow-based network methodology called Environ Analysis (Patten 1978) with sample applications.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%