Overholtzer-McLeod Karen L
Department of Zoology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331-2914, USA.
Ecology. 2006 Apr;87(4):1017-26. doi: 10.1890/0012-9658(2006)87[1017:coprsf]2.0.co;2.
The spatial configuration of habitat patches can profoundly affect a number of ecological interactions, including those between predators and prey. I examined the effects of reef spacing on predator-prey interactions within coral-reef fish assemblages in the Bahamas. Using manipulative field experiments, I determined that reef spacing influences whether and how density-dependent predation occurs. Mortality rates of juveniles of two ecologically dissimilar species (beaugregory damselfish and yellowhead wrasse) were similarly affected by reef spacing; for both species, mortality was density dependent on reef patches that were spatially isolated (separated by 50 m), and density independent on reef patches that were aggregated (separated by 5 m). A subsequent experiment with the damselfish demonstrated that a common resident predator (coney) caused a substantial proportion of the observed mortality, independent of reef spacing. Compared to isolated reefs, aggregated reefs were much more likely to be visited by transient predators (mostly yellowtail snappers), regardless of prey density, and on these reefs, mortality rates approached 100% for both prey species. Transient predators exhibited neither an aggregative response nor a type 3 functional response, and consequently were not the source of density dependence observed on the isolated reefs. These patterns suggest that resident predators caused density-dependent mortality in their prey through type 3 functional responses on all reefs, but on aggregated reefs, this density dependence was overwhelmed by high, density-independent mortality caused by transient predators. Thus, the spatial configuration of reef habitat affected both the magnitude of total predation and the existence of density-dependent mortality. The combined effects of the increasing fragmentation of coral reef habitats at numerous scales and global declines in predatory fish may have important consequences for the regulation of resident fish populations.
栖息地斑块的空间配置会深刻影响许多生态相互作用,包括捕食者与猎物之间的相互作用。我研究了礁石间距对巴哈马珊瑚礁鱼类群落中捕食者与猎物相互作用的影响。通过操纵性野外实验,我确定礁石间距会影响密度依赖型捕食是否发生以及如何发生。两种生态习性不同的幼鱼(博氏雀鲷和黄头濑鱼)的死亡率受礁石间距的影响相似;对于这两个物种来说,在空间隔离的礁石斑块(相距50米)上,死亡率与密度有关,而在聚集的礁石斑块(相距5米)上,死亡率与密度无关。随后对雀鲷进行的一项实验表明,一种常见的常驻捕食者(科尼鱼)导致了观察到的大部分死亡,与礁石间距无关。与孤立的礁石相比,无论猎物密度如何,聚集的礁石更有可能被临时捕食者(主要是黄斑笛鲷)光顾,在这些礁石上,两种猎物的死亡率都接近100%。临时捕食者既没有表现出聚集反应,也没有表现出Ⅲ型功能反应,因此不是在孤立礁石上观察到的密度依赖性的来源。这些模式表明,常驻捕食者通过在所有礁石上的Ⅲ型功能反应导致其猎物的密度依赖性死亡,但在聚集的礁石上,这种密度依赖性被临时捕食者导致的与密度无关的高死亡率所掩盖。因此,礁石栖息地的空间配置影响了总捕食量的大小和密度依赖性死亡的存在。珊瑚礁栖息地在多个尺度上日益破碎化以及捕食性鱼类全球数量下降的综合影响,可能会对常驻鱼类种群的调节产生重要影响。