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      Exposing the structure of an Arctic food web

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          Abstract

          How food webs are structured has major implications for their stability and dynamics. While poorly studied to date, arctic food webs are commonly assumed to be simple in structure, with few links per species. If this is the case, then different parts of the web may be weakly connected to each other, with populations and species united by only a low number of links. We provide the first highly resolved description of trophic link structure for a large part of a high-arctic food web. For this purpose, we apply a combination of recent techniques to describing the links between three predator guilds (insectivorous birds, spiders, and lepidopteran parasitoids) and their two dominant prey orders (Diptera and Lepidoptera). The resultant web shows a dense link structure and no compartmentalization or modularity across the three predator guilds. Thus, both individual predators and predator guilds tap heavily into the prey community of each other, offering versatile scope for indirect interactions across different parts of the web. The current description of a first but single arctic web may serve as a benchmark toward which to gauge future webs resolved by similar techniques. Targeting an unusual breadth of predator guilds, and relying on techniques with a high resolution, it suggests that species in this web are closely connected. Thus, our findings call for similar explorations of link structure across multiple guilds in both arctic and other webs. From an applied perspective, our description of an arctic web suggests new avenues for understanding how arctic food webs are built and function and of how they respond to current climate change. It suggests that to comprehend the community-level consequences of rapid arctic warming, we should turn from analyses of populations, population pairs, and isolated predator–prey interactions to considering the full set of interacting species.

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          Most cited references78

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          Predation, apparent competition, and the structure of prey communities

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            Finding and evaluating community structure in networks.

            We propose and study a set of algorithms for discovering community structure in networks-natural divisions of network nodes into densely connected subgroups. Our algorithms all share two definitive features: first, they involve iterative removal of edges from the network to split it into communities, the edges removed being identified using any one of a number of possible "betweenness" measures, and second, these measures are, crucially, recalculated after each removal. We also propose a measure for the strength of the community structure found by our algorithms, which gives us an objective metric for choosing the number of communities into which a network should be divided. We demonstrate that our algorithms are highly effective at discovering community structure in both computer-generated and real-world network data, and show how they can be used to shed light on the sometimes dauntingly complex structure of networked systems.
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              Ecological dynamics across the Arctic associated with recent climate change.

              At the close of the Fourth International Polar Year, we take stock of the ecological consequences of recent climate change in the Arctic, focusing on effects at population, community, and ecosystem scales. Despite the buffering effect of landscape heterogeneity, Arctic ecosystems and the trophic relationships that structure them have been severely perturbed. These rapid changes may be a bellwether of changes to come at lower latitudes and have the potential to affect ecosystem services related to natural resources, food production, climate regulation, and cultural integrity. We highlight areas of ecological research that deserve priority as the Arctic continues to warm.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ecol Evol
                Ecol Evol
                ece3
                Ecology and Evolution
                John Wiley & Sons, Ltd (Chichester, UK )
                2045-7758
                2045-7758
                September 2015
                24 August 2015
                : 5
                : 17
                : 3842-3856
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Agricultural Sciences, University of Helsinki Latokartanonkaari 5, FI-00014, Helsinki, Finland
                [2 ]Department of Biology, University of Turku Vesilinnantie 5, FI-20014, Turku, Finland
                [3 ]Department of Ecology, Environment and Plant Sciences, Stockholm University SE-106 91, Stockholm, Sweden
                [4 ]Department of Bioscience, Aarhus University Ny Munkegade 114, DK–8000, Aarhus, Denmark
                [5 ]Conservation Ecology Group, Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences, University of Groningen P.O. Box 11103, 9700 CC, Groningen, The Netherlands
                [6 ]Arctic Research Centre, Department of Bioscience, Aarhus University Frederiksborgvej 399, DK-4000, Roskilde, Denmark
                [7 ]Laboratoire Biogéosciences, UMR CNRS 6282, Université de Bourgogne 6 Boulevard Gabriel, 21000, Dijon, France
                [8 ]Groupe de Recherche en Ecologie Arctique 16 rue de Vernot, 21440, Francheville, France
                Author notes
                Correspondence Helena K. Wirta, Department of Agricultural Sciences, University of Helsinki, Latokartanonkaari 5, FI-00014 Helsinki, Finland., Tel: +358 40 590 9898;, Fax: +358 9 191 58582;, E-mail: helena.wirta@ 123456helsinki.fi
                [†]

                These authors contributed equally to this work.

                Funding Information Funding was received from INTERACT (projects QUANTIC and INTERPRED) under the European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme (to HW, TR and JR), from the University of Helsinki (grant number 788/51/2010 to TR), from the Academy of Finland (grant number 1276909 to TR), from Carl Tryggers Foundation for Scientific Research (to PH), from Kone foundation (to HW), from World Wildlife Fund- the Netherlands (to JR), from the French Polar Institute − IPEV (program “Interactions” to OG), from Turku University Foundation, from Emil Aaltonen foundation (to EJV), from Carlsbergfondet (to CR) and from Aage V. Jensen Charity foundation (to NMS).

                Article
                10.1002/ece3.1647
                4567885
                26380710
                58a8b664-dc53-4c16-a6cc-1076b551de00
                © 2015 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 09 April 2015
                : 16 June 2015
                : 09 July 2015
                Categories
                Original Research

                Evolutionary Biology
                calidris,dna barcoding,generalism,greenland,hymenoptera,molecular diet analysis,pardosa,plectrophenax,specialism,xysticus

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