| Literature DB >> 28359345 |
Pedro Luna1, Erick J Corro1, Diana A Ahuatzin-Flores1, Reuber L Antoniazzi1, Nathalia Barrozo1, Edgar Chávez-González1, Juan J Morales-Trejo1, Wesley Dáttilo1.
Abstract
In the last years, there were a growing number of studies using the metric H 2' to calculate complementary specialization in host-parasite interaction networks. However, only a few studies have explored the sensitivity of H 2' to network dimensions (i.e. species richness and number of interactions), which consequently could generate studies that are not comparable among them or lead to biased conclusions. In this study, we used the recent published study conducted by Rivera-García et al. in 2016 involving host-bat fly networks as an example to call attention to the risk of using H 2' to calculate specialization for small matrices. After conducting analyses based on both empirical and simulated data, we show that H 2' values are strongly affected by randomly allocation of species interactions to another cell in the matrix for small networks and that therefore the results and conclusions presented in Rivera-García et al. in 2016 are only an artefact of the dataset used. Therefore, we fully recommended taking into account the careful use of small networks to measuring specialization in host-parasite interactions.Entities:
Keywords: Biased conclusion; complementary specialization; host–parasite interactions; null models
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28359345 DOI: 10.1017/S0031182017000361
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasitology ISSN: 0031-1820 Impact factor: 3.234