Predator diversity effects cascade across an ecosystem boundary

被引:26
|
作者
Wesner, Jeff Scott [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oklahoma, Dept Zool, Norman, OK 73019 USA
[2] Univ Oklahoma, Biol Stn, Norman, OK 73019 USA
关键词
LENGTH-MASS RELATIONSHIPS; TROPHIC CASCADES; FOOD WEBS; TERRESTRIAL; STREAM; PREY; RICHNESS; FISH; CONSEQUENCES; SUBSIDIES;
D O I
10.1111/j.1600-0706.2011.19413.x
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Food webs in different ecosystems are often connected through spatial resource subsidies. As a result, biodiversity effects in one ecosystem may cascade to adjacent ecosystems. I tested the hypothesis that aquatic predator diversity effects cascade to terrestrial food webs by altering a prey subsidy (biomass and trophic structure of emerging aquatic insects) entering terrestrial food webs, in turn altering the distribution of a terrestrial consumer (spider) that feeds on emerging aquatic insects. Fish presence, but not diversity, altered the trophic structure of emerging aquatic insects by strongly reducing the biomass of emerging predators (dragonflies) relative to non-feeding taxa (chironomid midges). Fish diversity reduced emerging insect biomass through enhanced effects on the most common prey taxa: predatory dragonflies Pantala flavescens and non-feeding chironomids. Terrestrial spiders (Tetragnathidae) primarily captured emerging chironomids, which were reduced in the high richness (3 spp.) treatment relative to the 1 and 2 species treatments. As a result, terrestrial spider abundance was lower above pools with high fish richness (3 species) than pools with 1 and 2 species. Synergistic predation effects were mostly limited to the high richness treatment, in which fish occupied each level of vertical microhabitat in the water-column (benthic, middle, surface). This study demonstrates that predator diversity effects are not limited to the habitat of the predator, but can propagate to adjacent ecosystems, and demonstrates the utility of using simple predator functional traits (foraging domain) to more accurately predict the direction of predator diversity effects.
引用
收藏
页码:53 / 60
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Predicting Predator Diversity Effects on Ecosystem Function
    Mccoy, M. W.
    Vonesh, J. R.
    Bolker, B. M.
    [J]. INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE BIOLOGY, 2015, 55 : E121 - E121
  • [2] Effects of predator functional diversity on grassland ecosystem function
    Schmitz, Oswald J.
    [J]. ECOLOGY, 2009, 90 (09) : 2339 - 2345
  • [3] Beyond diversity: how nested predator effects control ecosystem functions
    Schneider, Florian Dirk
    Brose, Ulrich
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY, 2013, 82 (01) : 64 - 71
  • [4] Ecosystem engineering effects on species diversity across ecosystems: a meta-analysis
    Romero, Gustavo Q.
    Goncalves-Souza, Thiago
    Vieira, Camila
    Koricheva, Julia
    [J]. BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 2015, 90 (03) : 877 - 890
  • [5] A simple plant mutation abets a predator-diversity cascade
    Northfield, Tobin D.
    Snyder, William E.
    Snyder, Gretchen B.
    Eigenbrode, Sanford D.
    [J]. ECOLOGY, 2012, 93 (02) : 411 - 420
  • [6] Predator-mediated effects of severe drought associated with poor reproductive success of a seabird in a cross-ecosystem cascade
    Thomsen, Sarah K.
    Green, David J.
    [J]. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2019, 25 (05) : 1642 - 1652
  • [7] Predator diversity and ecosystem functioning: Density modifies the effect of resource partitioning
    Griffin, John N.
    De la Haye, Kate L.
    Hawkins, Stephen J.
    Thompson, Richard C.
    Jenkins, Stuart R.
    [J]. ECOLOGY, 2008, 89 (02) : 298 - 305
  • [8] Effects of predator hunting mode on grassland ecosystem function
    Schmitz, Oswald J.
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2008, 319 (5865) : 952 - 954
  • [9] Cascading predator effects in a Fijian coral reef ecosystem
    Rasher, Douglas B.
    Hoey, Andrew S.
    Hay, Mark E.
    [J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2017, 7
  • [10] Phenotypes of predator individuals underpin contrasting ecosystem effects
    Rota, Thibaut
    Jabiol, Jeremy
    Lamothe, Sylvain
    Lambrigot, Didier
    Chauvet, Eric
    Lecerf, Antoine
    [J]. FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, 2024, 69 (05) : 739 - 753