Publications by authors named "I G Varassin"

The presence in ecological communities of unfeasible species interactions, termed forbidden links, due to physiological or morphological exploitation barriers has been long debated, but little direct evidence has been found. Forbidden links are likely to make ecological communities less robust to species extinctions, stressing the need to assess their prevalence. Here, we used a dataset of plant-hummingbird interactions, coupled with a Bayesian hierarchical model, to assess the importance of exploitation barriers in determining species interactions.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study highlights how socioeconomic factors, such as wealth concentration and social inequality, influence ecosystem services (ES), particularly crop pollination in Brazil over a decade from 2006 to 2017.
  • It found that as small, diverse farms were replaced by large monocultures, the demand for pollination services increased by 3.3%, but both the diversity and provision of these services dropped significantly—by 16.1% and 22.5%, respectively.
  • The research indicates that regions with concentrated land ownership and fewer financial resources face reduced pollination services, emphasizing the need for a multidimensional approach to understand these complex socio-ecological interactions.
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Plant-hummingbird interactions are considered a classic example of coevolution, a process in which mutually dependent species influence each other's evolution. Plants depend on hummingbirds for pollination, whereas hummingbirds rely on nectar for food. As a step towards understanding coevolution, this review focuses on the macroevolutionary consequences of plant-hummingbird interactions, a relatively underexplored area in the current literature.

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Coffee farms receive ecosystem services that rely on pollinators and pest predators. Landscape-scale processes regulate the flow of these biodiversity-based services. Consequently, the coffee farms' surrounding landscape impacts coffee production.

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Globally, human activities impose threats to nature and the provision of ecosystem services, such as pollination. In this context, ecological restoration provides opportunities to create managed landscapes that maximize biodiversity conservation and sustainable agriculture, e.g.

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