Weissburg Marc J, Ferner Matthew C, Pisut Daniel P, Smee Delbert L
School of Biology, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta 30332-0230, USA.
J Chem Ecol. 2002 Oct;28(10):1953-70. doi: 10.1023/a:1020741710060.
To locate food, mobile consumers in aquatic habitats perceive and move towards sources of attractive chemicals. There has been much progress in understanding how consumers use chemicals to identify and locate prey despite the elusive identity of odor signals and the complex effects of turbulence on chemical dispersion. This review highlights how integrative studies on behavior, fluid physics, and chemical isolation can be fundamental in elucidating mechanisms that regulate species composition and distribution. We suggest three areas where further research may yield important ecological insights. First, although basic aspects of stimulatory molecules are known, our understanding of how consumers identify prey from a distance remains poor, and the lack of studies examining the influence of distance perception on food preference may result in inaccurate estimation of foraging behavior in the field. Second, the ability of many animals to find prey is greatest in unidirectional, low turbulence flow environments, although recent evidence indicates a trade-off in movement speed versus tracking ability in turbulent conditions. This suggests that predator foraging mode may affect competitive interactions among consumers, and that turbulence provides a hydrodynamic refuge in space or time, leading to particular associations between predator success, prey distributions, and flow. Third, studies have been biased towards examining predator tracking. Current data suggest a variety of mechanisms prey may use to disguise their presence and avoid predation; these mechanisms also may produce associations between prey distributions and flow environments. These examples of how chemical attraction may mediate interactions between consumers and their resources suggest that the ecology of chemically mediated prey perception may be as fundamental to the organization of aquatic communities as the ecology of chemical deterrence.
为了寻找食物,水生栖息地中的移动性消费者会感知并朝着有吸引力的化学物质来源移动。尽管气味信号的具体身份难以捉摸,且湍流对化学物质扩散有复杂影响,但在理解消费者如何利用化学物质识别和定位猎物方面已经取得了很大进展。本综述强调了行为、流体物理学和化学分离的综合研究在阐明调节物种组成和分布的机制方面如何具有基础性作用。我们提出了三个进一步研究可能会产生重要生态见解的领域。首先,虽然刺激分子的基本方面是已知的,但我们对消费者如何从远处识别猎物的理解仍然不足,而且缺乏研究考察距离感知对食物偏好的影响可能会导致对野外觅食行为的估计不准确。其次,许多动物在单向、低湍流的流动环境中寻找猎物的能力最强,尽管最近的证据表明在湍流条件下运动速度与追踪能力之间存在权衡。这表明捕食者的觅食模式可能会影响消费者之间的竞争相互作用,并且湍流在空间或时间上提供了一个水动力避难所,导致捕食者成功率、猎物分布和水流之间存在特定的关联。第三,研究一直偏向于考察捕食者的追踪。目前的数据表明猎物可能会使用多种机制来隐藏自己的存在并避免被捕食;这些机制也可能导致猎物分布与流动环境之间产生关联。这些关于化学吸引如何介导消费者与其资源之间相互作用的例子表明,化学介导的猎物感知生态学对于水生群落的组织可能与化学威慑生态学同样重要。