Urbanization alters the spatiotemporal dynamics of plant-pollinator networks in a tropical megacity

Ecol Lett. 2023 Nov;26(11):1951-1962. doi: 10.1111/ele.14324. Epub 2023 Oct 19.

Abstract

Urbanization is a major driver of biodiversity change but how it interacts with spatial and temporal gradients to influence the dynamics of plant-pollinator networks is poorly understood, especially in tropical urbanization hotspots. Here, we analysed the drivers of environmental, spatial and temporal turnover of plant-pollinator interactions (interaction β-diversity) along an urbanization gradient in Bengaluru, a South Indian megacity. The compositional turnover of plant-pollinator interactions differed more between seasons and with local urbanization intensity than with spatial distance, suggesting that seasonality and environmental filtering were more important than dispersal limitation for explaining plant-pollinator interaction β-diversity. Furthermore, urbanization amplified the seasonal dynamics of plant-pollinator interactions, with stronger temporal turnover in urban compared to rural sites, driven by greater turnover of native non-crop plant species (not managed by people). Our study demonstrates that environmental, spatial and temporal gradients interact to shape the dynamics of plant-pollinator networks and urbanization can strongly amplify these dynamics.

Keywords: Bangalore; India; environmental filtering; interaction beta-diversity partitioning; interaction rewiring; seasonal dynamics; species turnover.

MeSH terms

  • Biodiversity
  • Ecosystem
  • Humans
  • Plants
  • Pollination*
  • Seasons
  • Urbanization*