Mariana Morais Vidal
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Mariana Morais Vidal.
Advances in Ecological Research | 2012
Melanie Hagen; W. Daniel Kissling; Claus Rasmussen; Marcus A. M. de Aguiar; Lee E. Brown; Daniel W. Carstensen; Isabel Alves-dos-Santos; Yoko L. Dupont; Francois Edwards; Julieta Genini; Paulo R. Guimarães; Gareth B. Jenkins; Pedro Jordano; Christopher N. Kaiser-Bunbury; Mark E. Ledger; Kate P. Maia; Flavia Maria Darcie Marquitti; Órla B. McLaughlin; L. Patrícia C. Morellato; Eoin J. O'Gorman; Kristian Trøjelsgaard; Jason M. Tylianakis; Mariana Morais Vidal; Guy Woodward; Jens M. Olesen
Biodiversity is organised into complex ecological networks of interacting species in local ecosystems, but our knowledge about the effects of habitat fragmentation on such systems remains limited. We consider the effects of this key driver of both local and global change on both mutualistic and antagonistic systems at different levels of biological organisation and spatiotemporal scales. There is a complex interplay of patterns and processes related to the variation and influence of spatial, temporal and biotic drivers in ecological networks. Species traits (e.g. body size, dispersal ability) play an important role in determining how networks respond to fragment size and isolation, edge shape and permeability, and the quality of the surrounding landscape matrix. Furthermore, the perception of spatial scale (e.g. environmental grain) and temporal effects (time lags, extinction debts) can differ markedly among species, network modules and trophic levels, highlighting the need to develop a more integrated perspective that considers not just nodes, but the structural role and strength of species interactions (e.g. as hubs, spatial couplers and determinants of connectance, nestedness and modularity) in response to habitat fragmentation. Many challenges remain for improving our understanding: the likely importance of specialisation, functional redundancy and trait matching has been largely overlooked. The potentially critical effects of apex consumers, abundant species and super-generalists on network changes and evolutionary dynamics also need to be addressed in future research. Ultimately, spatial and ecological networks need to be combined to explore the effects of dispersal, colonisation, extinction and habitat fragmentation on network structure and coevolutionary dynamics. Finally, we need to embed network approaches more explicitly within applied ecology in general, because they offer great potential for improving on the current species-based or habitat-centric approaches to our management and conservation of biodiversity in the face of environmental change.
Ecology | 2014
Mariana Morais Vidal; Érica Hasui; Marco A. Pizo; Jorge Yoshio Tamashiro; Wesley Rodrigues Silva; Paulo R. Guimarães
Most tree species rely on vertebrates for seed dispersal, and many vertebrates use fruits as food resources in tropical forests. Therefore, plant–frugivore interactions affect population dynamics and persistence in ecological communities. Plant–frugivore interactions often involve many species, forming networks of interacting plants and animals that play different roles in determining network organization. The network organization is the way interactions are structured in the community, which may have consequences for its ecological and evolutionary dynamics. Some species have greater influences on network organization and may be particularly important to species persistence. We identified the frugivores most important to the organization of networks of plants and frugivorous birds in three contiguous Atlantic forest sites in southeastern Brazil. We found that the species that contributed most to network organization were at higher risk of extinction. Among the main contributors to network organization we...
PLOS ONE | 2015
Julia Astegiano; François Massol; Mariana Morais Vidal; Pierre-Olivier Cheptou; Paulo R. Guimarães
Most flowering plants depend on pollinators to reproduce. Thus, evaluating the robustness of plant-pollinator assemblages to species loss is a major concern. How species interaction patterns are related to species sensitivity to partner loss may influence the robustness of plant-pollinator assemblages. In plants, both reproductive dependence on pollinators (breeding system) and dispersal ability may modulate plant sensitivity to pollinator loss. For instance, species with strong dependence (e.g. dioecious species) and low dispersal (e.g. seeds dispersed by gravity) may be the most sensitive to pollinator loss. We compared the interaction patterns of plants differing in dependence on pollinators and dispersal ability in a meta-dataset comprising 192 plant species from 13 plant-pollinator networks. In addition, network robustness was compared under different scenarios representing sequences of plant extinctions associated with plant sensitivity to pollinator loss. Species with different dependence on pollinators and dispersal ability showed similar levels of generalization. Although plants with low dispersal ability interacted with more generalized pollinators, low-dispersal plants with strong dependence on pollinators (i.e. the most sensitive to pollinator loss) interacted with more particular sets of pollinators (i.e. shared a low proportion of pollinators with other plants). Only two assemblages showed lower robustness under the scenario considering plant generalization, dependence on pollinators and dispersal ability than under the scenario where extinction sequences only depended on plant generalization (i.e. where higher generalization level was associated with lower probability of extinction). Overall, our results support the idea that species generalization and network topology may be good predictors of assemblage robustness to species loss, independently of plant dispersal ability and breeding system. In contrast, since ecological specialization among partners may increase the probability of disruption of interactions, the fact that the plants most sensitive to pollinator loss interacted with more particular pollinator assemblages suggest that the persistence of these plants and their pollinators might be highly compromised.
Biological Conservation | 2013
Mariana Morais Vidal; Mathias M. Pires; Paulo R. Guimarães
Acta Botanica Brasilica | 2006
Vânia Regina Pivello; Daniela Petenon; Flávia Moraes de Jesus; Sérgio Tadeu Meirelles; Mariana Morais Vidal; Regina de Azevedo Soares Alonso; Geraldo Antônio Daher Corrêa Franco; Jean Paul Metzger
Brazilian Journal of Botany | 2007
Mariana Morais Vidal; Vânia Regina Pivello; Sérgio Tadeu Meirelles; Jean Paul Metzger
Archive | 2015
Julia Astegiano; Paulo R. Guimarães; Pierre-Olivier Cheptou; Mariana Morais Vidal; Camila Yumi Mandai; Lorena Ashworth; François Massol
Advances in Ecological Research | 2015
Julia Astegiano; Paulo R. Guimarães; Pierre-Olivier Cheptou; Mariana Morais Vidal; Camila Yumi Mandai; Lorena Ashworth; François Massol
Estudos Avançados | 2015
Leandro Reverberi Tambosi; Mariana Morais Vidal; Silvio Frosini de Barros Ferraz; Jean Paul Metzger
Austral Ecology | 2018
Julia Caram Sfair; Veridiana de Lara Weiser; Fernando Roberto Martins; Mariana Morais Vidal; Paulo R. Guimarães