2015
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2015.1589
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Latitudinal gradients in biotic niche breadth vary across ecosystem types

Abstract: Several properties of food webs-the networks of feeding links between species-are known to vary systematically with the species richness of the underlying community. Under the 'latitude-niche breadth hypothesis', which predicts that species in the tropics will tend to evolve narrower niches, one might expect that these scaling relationships could also be affected by latitude. To test this hypothesis, we analysed the scaling relationships between species richness and average generality, vulnerability and links … Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(62 citation statements)
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“…Our results complement the findings of Cirtwill et al (2015), who used a very different measure of niche-breadth to our approach, but nevertheless found, for freshwater communities (but not for communities in other ecosystem types), strong effects of latitude on scaling relationships (between species richness and average generality, vulnerability and links per species across empirical food webs).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
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“…Our results complement the findings of Cirtwill et al (2015), who used a very different measure of niche-breadth to our approach, but nevertheless found, for freshwater communities (but not for communities in other ecosystem types), strong effects of latitude on scaling relationships (between species richness and average generality, vulnerability and links per species across empirical food webs).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…Species which occupy lengthy ranges along niche-axes associated with such measures, and with correspondingly wide niche-breadth, are usually considered to be generalist strategists (Grime 1979;Murphy et al, 1990), with broad geographical range (Slatyer et al, 2013;Cirtwill et al, 2015). The converse is likely to hold for species which exhibit only short niche-axis lengths, with specialised survival strategies, and only limited geographical range.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…Indeed, multiple recent studies stress the need for identifying common rules dictating who interacts with whom within large communities (Gravel et al 2013;Morales-Castilla et al 2015;Bartomeus et al 2016). Interestingly, when food webs from different environments are collated in joint analyses of, e.g., latitudinal trends, partly different patterns appear in different environments, again suggesting slightly different drivers in different systems (Schleuning et al 2012;Morris et al 2014;Cirtwill et al 2015).…”
Section: Emerging Differences Similarities and Links Between The Tementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A1), maybe reflecting that biogeographical differences and ecological processes (e.g. higher interspecific competition) at local or evolutionary scales lead to increased niche specialisation towards low latitudes, as has been found in several previous studies (Griffiths 2006, Reyjol et al 2007, Mason et al 2008, Tedesco et al 2012, Schleuter et al 2012, Cirtwill et al 2015.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 60%