Trophic cascades in seagrass meadows depend on mesograzer variation in feeding rates, predation susceptibility, and abundance
نویسندگان
چکیده
Seagrasses provide important habitat for fishes and invertebrates but are declining around the globe, often due to overgrowth by algae. One hypothesis for this overgrowth is that overfishing of top consumers has led to greater numbers of small predatory fishes that reduce the abundance of mesograzers. This trophic cascade hypothesis requires that the same species that control algal biomass are also susceptible to fish predation. While mesograzers are known to vary in their feeding rates on algae and seagrasses, much less is known about variation in predation susceptibility and how this is related to grazing abilities. For 6 common mesograzers from Bodega Harbor, California, USA, we assessed feeding rates on macroalgae (Ulva spp.), epiphytic micro algae, and eelgrass. We then assessed predation susceptibility using juvenile cabezon Scorpae nichthys marmoratus in tanks of eelgrass habitat with and without Ulva. We found that the fastest consumers of all 3 primary producers were the least susceptible to predation. This ap peared to be due to predator avoidance strategies; fish consumed visible caprellids at a higher rate than the larger consumers, which were either better camouflaged or able to avoid predation by building tubes within the macroalgae. Using our feeding and predation rates, along with relative abundances from field surveys, we calculated the expected trophic cascade effect with and without grazer species differences. Because fish predation was skewed towards the most abundant but least important (per capita) grazers, incorporating trait variation led to a 50 to 80% reduction in expected trophic cascade effects. Examining other seagrass communities for either similar grazer species or a similar mismatch between feeding rates and predation susceptibility may improve our understanding of the variation in trophic cascade effects across systems.
منابع مشابه
The Role of Seagrass Traits in Mediating Zostera noltei Vulnerability to Mesograzers
Understanding how intra-specific differences in plant traits mediate vulnerability to herbivores of relevant habitat-forming plants is vital to attain a better knowledge on the drivers of the structure and functioning of ecosystems. Such studies, however, are rare in seagrass-mesograzer systems despite the increasingly recognized relevance of mesograzers as seagrass consumers. We investigated t...
متن کاملLiving on the edge: dugongs prefer to forage in microhabitats that allow escape from rather than avoidance of predators
When threatened with predation, foraging prey can cease feeding and seek refuge or shift to feeding sites (microhabitats) offering increased safety. Predator-induced microhabitat shifts by large herbivores are of interest to ecologists because spatial patterns of foraging by these animals shape plant communities. The influence of predation risk on microhabitat use by large herbivores in marine ...
متن کاملExperimental evidence of chemical deterrence against multiple herbivores in the seagrass Posidonia oceanica
There is increasing evidence of the importance of herbivory in seagrass communities, but the factors that regulate seagrass–herbivore interactions remain largely unknown. Many terrestrial plants and marine algae chemically deter herbivores using secondary metabolites, yet their incidence and role on seagrasses have received little attention. Posidonia oceanica, the dominant seagrass in the Medi...
متن کاملBehaviorally Mediated Trophic Cascades: Effects of Predation Risk on Food Web Interactions
Trophic cascades are regarded as important signals for top-down control of food web dynamics. Although there is clear evidence supporting the existence of trophic cascades, the mechanisms driving this important dynamic are less clear. Trophic cascades could arise through direct population-level effects, in which predators prey on herbivores, thereby decreasing the abundance of herbivores that i...
متن کاملContrasting cascades: insectivorous birds increase pine but not parasitic mistletoe growth.
1. Intraguild predation occurs when top predators feed upon both intermediate predators and herbivores. Intraguild predators may thus have little net impact on herbivore abundance. Variation among communities in the strength of trophic cascades (the indirect effects of predators on plants) may be due to differing frequencies of intraguild predation. Less is known about the influence of variatio...
متن کامل