Consumer trait variation influences tritrophic interactions in salt marsh communities
نویسندگان
چکیده
The importance of intraspecific variation has emerged as a key question in community ecology, helping to bridge the gap between ecology and evolution. Although much of this work has focused on plant species, recent syntheses have highlighted the prevalence and potential importance of morphological, behavioral, and life history variation within animals for ecological and evolutionary processes. Many small-bodied consumers live on the plant that they consume, often resulting in host plant-associated trait variation within and across consumer species. Given the central position of consumer species within tritrophic food webs, such consumer trait variation may play a particularly important role in mediating trophic dynamics, including trophic cascades. In this study, we used a series of field surveys and laboratory experiments to document intraspecific trait variation in a key consumer species, the marsh periwinkle Littoraria irrorata, based on its host plant species (Spartina alterniflora or Juncus roemerianus) in a mixed species assemblage. We then conducted a 12-week mesocosm experiment to examine the effects of Littoraria trait variation on plant community structure and dynamics in a tritrophic salt marsh food web. Littoraria from different host plant species varied across a suite of morphological and behavioral traits. These consumer trait differences interacted with plant community composition and predator presence to affect overall plant stem height, as well as differentially alter the density and biomass of the two key plant species in this system. Whether due to genetic differences or phenotypic plasticity, trait differences between consumer types had significant ecological consequences for the tritrophic marsh food web over seasonal time scales. By altering the cascading effects of the top predator on plant community structure and dynamics, consumer differences may generate a feedback over longer time scales, which in turn influences the degree of trait divergence in subsequent consumer populations.
منابع مشابه
Critical Patch Sizes and the Spatial Structure of Salt Marsh Communities
Title of Document: CRITICAL PATCH SIZES AND THE SPATIAL STRUCTURE OF SALT MARSH COMMUNITIES. Holly Marie Martinson, Ph.D., 2009 Directed By: Professor William F. Fagan, Department of Biology The size, connectivity, and quality of habitat patches can have multifaceted impacts on species and communities. In this dissertation, I combined a multi-year field survey, manipulative field experiments, a...
متن کاملTropical Tritrophic Interactions: Nasty Hosts and Ubiquitous Cascades
In the tropics, the high diversity of species at all trophic levels combined with increased chemical defense and predation intensity create ideal opportunities for interesting research in community ecology. Two particularly useful themes in the realm of tropical tritrophic interactions are trophic cascades and coevolution, and prominent hypotheses generated by these ideas should continue to pro...
متن کاملConsumer control of salt marshes driven by human disturbance.
Salt marsh ecosystems are widely considered to be controlled exclusively by bottom-up forces, but there is mounting evidence that human disturbances are triggering consumer control in western Atlantic salt marshes, often with catastrophic consequences. In other marine ecosystems, human disturbances routinely dampen (e.g., coral reefs, sea grass beds) and strengthen (e.g., kelps) consumer contro...
متن کاملUncertain future of New England salt marshes
Salt marsh plant communities have long been envisioned as dynamic, resilient systems that quickly recover from human impacts and natural disturbances. But are salt marshes sufficiently resilient to withstand the escalating intensity and scale of human impacts in coastal environments? In this study we examined the independent and interactive effects of emerging threats to New England salt marshe...
متن کاملHerbivory Drives the Spread of Salt Marsh Die-Off
Salt marsh die-off is a Western Atlantic conservation problem that has recently spread into Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island, USA. It has been hypothesized to be driven by: 1) eutrophication decreasing plant investment into belowground biomass causing plant collapse, 2) boat wakes eroding creek banks, 3) pollution or disease affecting plant health, 4) substrate hardness controlling herbivorous cr...
متن کامل