1Mutualistic networks are highly dynamic, characterized by high temporal turnover of species 2 and interactions. Yet, we have a limited understanding of how the internal structure of 3 these networks and the roles species play in them vary through time. We used six years of 4 observation data and a novel statistical method (dynamic stochastic block models) to assess 5 how network structure and species' structural position within the network change across 6 time in a quantitative plant-pollinator network from a dryland ecosystem in Argentina. Our 7 analyses revealed a core-periphery structure persistent through seasons and years. Yet, 8 species structural position as core or peripheral were highly dynamic: virtually all species 9 that were at the core in some seasons were also peripheral in other seasons, while many 10 other species remained always peripheral. Our results illuminate our understanding of the 11 dynamics of ecological networks and have important implications for ecosystem management 12 and conservation.
13Keywords: core-periphery structure, stochastic block model, mutualistic networks, plant-14 pollinator interactions, species role, temporal dynamics 15 Studies of plant-animal mutualisms have historically focused on the interactions between 17 one or a few plant species and their animal mutualists (1; 2). This approach guided decades 18 of research, illuminating our understanding of the natural history, ecology and evolution of 19 plant-animal mutualisms, but at the same time limiting our understanding of how interac-20 tions operate in their broader community context (3). More recently, the use of a network 21 approach to study of plant-animal mutualistic interactions in their community context has 22 offered new insights on the relative specialization and reciprocal dependence of these in-23 teractions and, ultimately, the ecological and evolutionary processes that depend on them 24 (4; 3; 5; 6). The study of mutualistic networks has revealed several pervasive properties, 25 including nestedness (7), modularity (8), and asymmetry in both specialization (9) and inter-26 action strength (10), all of which are believed to have important ecological and evolutionary 27 implications (11; 12; 6; 13).
28Mutualistic networks are also characterized by high temporal variability, with species and 29 interactions switching on and off through time. In other words, these networks exhibit high 30 temporal turnover of species and interactions (14; 15; 16), in spite of an apparent stability in 31 some aggregate network attributes such as connectance and nestedness (14; 17). Past studies 32 have shown that the most persistent interactions are those located at the network core (the 33 most densely connected region of the network), which usually involves abundant, frequently 34 interacting species, and many occasional peripheral species (16; 18). What we still don't 35 know is the extent to which the structural position of individual species as core or peripheral 36 varies through time. In other words, is there a...