River food webs: an integrative approach to bottom-up flow webs, top-down impact webs, and trophic position

被引:17
|
作者
Benke, Arthur C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Alabama, Dept Biol Sci, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
flow food webs; freshwater invertebrates; interaction strength; omnivory; predator impact webs; river ecology; secondary production; snags; trophic level; trophic position; SECONDARY PRODUCTION; INTERACTION STRENGTH; INVERTEBRATE PRODUCTIVITY; STABLE-ISOTOPES; ORGANIC-MATTER; SNAG HABITAT; COMPLEX; QUANTIFICATION; EMERGENCE; FOREST;
D O I
10.1002/ecy.2228
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The majority of food web studies are based on connectivity, top-down impacts, bottom-up flows, or trophic position (TP), and ecologists have argued for decades which is best. Rarely have any two been considered simultaneously. The present study uses a procedure that integrates the last three approaches based on taxon-specific secondary production and gut analyses. Ingestion flows are quantified to create a flow web and the same data are used to quantify TP for all taxa. An individual predator's impacts also are estimated using the ratio of its ingestion (I) of each prey to prey production (P) to create an I/P web. This procedure was applied to 41 invertebrate taxa inhabiting submerged woody habitat in a southeastern U.S. river. A complex flow web starting with five basal food resources had 462 flows >1mg.m(-2).yr(-1), providing far more information than a connectivity web. Total flows from basal resources to primary consumers/omnivores were dominated by allochthonous amorphous detritus and ranged from 1 to >50,000mg.m(-2).yr(-1). Most predator-prey flows were much lower (<50mg.m(-2).yr(-1)), but some were >1,000 mg.m(-2).yr(-1). The I/P web showed that 83% of individual predator impacts were weak (<10%), whereas total predator impacts were often strong (e.g., 35% of prey sustained an impact >90%). Quantitative estimates of TP ranged from 2 to 3.7, contrasting sharply with seven integer-based trophic levels based on longest feeding chain. Traditional omnivores (TP=2.4-2.9) played an important role by consuming more prey and exerting higher impacts on primary consumers than strict predators (TP >= 3). This study illustrates how simultaneous quantification of flow pathways, predator impacts, and TP together provide an integrated characterization of natural food webs.
引用
收藏
页码:1370 / 1381
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The ChPT: top-down and bottom-up
    Kampf, Karol
    JOURNAL OF HIGH ENERGY PHYSICS, 2021, 2021 (12)
  • [42] The ChPT: top-down and bottom-up
    Karol Kampf
    Journal of High Energy Physics, 2021
  • [43] Top-Down Versus Bottom-Up
    Nisbet, Euan
    Weiss, Ray
    SCIENCE, 2010, 328 (5983) : 1241 - 1243
  • [44] Eutrophication induces shifts in the trophic position of invertebrates in aquatic food webs
    van der Lee, Gea H.
    Vonk, J. Arie
    Verdonschot, Ralf C. M.
    Kraak, Michiel H. S.
    Verdonschot, Piet F. M.
    Huisman, Jef
    ECOLOGY, 2021, 102 (03)
  • [46] Stable isotopes dissect aquatic food webs from the top to the bottom
    Middelburg, J. J.
    BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2014, 11 (08) : 2357 - 2371
  • [47] Water diversion and pollution interactively shape freshwater food webs through bottom-up mechanisms
    Guzman, Ioar
    Altieri, Paula
    Elosegi, Arturo
    Victoria Perez-Calpe, Ana
    von Schiller, Daniel
    Gonzalez, Jose M.
    Brauns, Mario
    Montoya, Jose M.
    Larranaga, Aitor
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2022, 28 (03) : 859 - 876
  • [48] Filter-feeders have differential bottom-up impacts on green and brown food webs
    Atkinson, Carla L.
    Halvorson, Halvor M.
    Kuehn, Kevin A.
    Winebarger, Monica
    Hamid, Ansley
    Waters, Matthew N.
    OECOLOGIA, 2021, 195 (01) : 187 - 198
  • [49] Filter-feeders have differential bottom-up impacts on green and brown food webs
    Carla L. Atkinson
    Halvor M. Halvorson
    Kevin A. Kuehn
    Monica Winebarger
    Ansley Hamid
    Matthew N. Waters
    Oecologia, 2021, 195 : 187 - 198
  • [50] Top-down control on plankton components in an Antarctic pond: experimental approach to the study of low-complexity food webs
    Luz Allende
    Haydée Pizarro
    Polar Biology, 2006, 29 : 893 - 901