Abstract
The structure of ecological communities is usually represented by food webs1,2,3. In these webs, we describe species by means of vertices connected by links representing the predations. We can therefore study different webs by considering the shape (topology) of these networks4,5. Comparing food webs by searching for regularities is of fundamental importance, because universal patterns would reveal common principles underlying the organization of different ecosystems. However, features observed in small food webs1,2,3,6 are different from those found in large ones7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15. Furthermore, food webs (except in isolated cases16,17) do not share18,19 general features with other types of network (including the Internet, the World Wide Web and biological webs). These features are a small-world character4,5 and a scale-free (power-law) distribution of the degree4,5 (the number of links per vertex). Here we propose to describe food webs as transportation networks20 by extending to them the concept of allometric scaling20,21,22 (how branching properties change with network size). We then decompose food webs in spanning trees and loop-forming links. We show that, whereas the number of loops varies significantly across real webs, spanning trees are characterized by universal scaling relations.
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We acknowledge support from the FET Open Project IST-2001-33555 COSIN.
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Garlaschelli, D., Caldarelli, G. & Pietronero, L. Universal scaling relations in food webs. Nature 423, 165–168 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1038/nature01604
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nature01604
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