Burkepile Deron E, Parker John D, Woodson C Brock, Mills Heath J, Kubanek Julia, Sobecky Patricia A, Hay Mark E
School of Biology, Georgia Institute of Technology, 310 Ferst Drive, Atlanta, Georgia 30332, USA.
Ecology. 2006 Nov;87(11):2821-31. doi: 10.1890/0012-9658(2006)87[2821:cmcbma]2.0.co;2.
Microbes are known to affect ecosystems and communities as decomposers, pathogens, and mutualists. However, they also may function as classic consumers and competitors with animals if they chemically deter larger consumers from using rich food-falls such as carrion, fruits, and seeds that can represent critical windfalls to both microbes and animals. Microbes often use chemicals (i.e., antibiotics) to compete against other microbes. Thus using chemicals against larger competitors might be expected and could redirect significant energy subsidies from upper trophic levels to the detrital pathway. When we baited traps in a coastal marine ecosystem with fresh vs. microbe-laden fish carrion, fresh carrion attracted 2.6 times as many animals per trap as microbe-laden carrion. This resulted from fresh carrion being found more frequently and from attracting more animals when found. Microbe-laden carrion was four times more likely to be uncolonized by large consumers than was fresh carrion. In the lab, the most common animal found in our traps (the stone crab Menippe mercenaria) ate fresh carrion 2.4 times more frequently than microbe-laden carrion. Bacteria-removal experiments and feeding bioassays using organic extracts of microbe-laden carrion showed that bacteria produced noxious chemicals that deterred animal consumers. Thus bacteria compete with large animal scavengers by rendering carcasses chemically repugnant. Because food-fall resources such as carrion are major food subsidies in many ecosystems, chemically mediated competition between microbes and animals could be an important, common, but underappreciated interaction within many communities.
微生物作为分解者、病原体和共生体,已知会影响生态系统和群落。然而,如果微生物通过化学方式阻止大型消费者利用丰富的食物来源,如腐肉、果实和种子,而这些食物对微生物和动物来说都是重要的意外收获,那么它们也可能充当典型的消费者,并与动物展开竞争。微生物经常使用化学物质(如抗生素)来与其他微生物竞争。因此,利用化学物质对抗大型竞争者是可以预期的,这可能会将大量的能量补贴从较高营养级重新导向碎屑路径。当我们在沿海海洋生态系统中用新鲜的与富含微生物的鱼腐肉作为诱饵设置陷阱时,每个陷阱中新鲜腐肉吸引的动物数量是富含微生物腐肉的2.6倍。这是因为新鲜腐肉被发现的频率更高,而且被发现时会吸引更多动物。富含微生物的腐肉未被大型消费者定殖的可能性是新鲜腐肉的四倍。在实验室中,我们陷阱中最常见的动物(石蟹Menippe mercenaria)食用新鲜腐肉的频率是富含微生物腐肉的2.4倍。去除细菌的实验以及使用富含微生物腐肉的有机提取物进行的喂食生物测定表明,细菌产生了有害化学物质,阻止了动物消费者。因此,细菌通过使尸体产生化学厌恶感来与大型动物食腐者竞争。由于腐肉等食物来源在许多生态系统中是主要的食物补贴,微生物与动物之间通过化学介导的竞争可能是许多群落中一种重要、常见但未得到充分认识的相互作用。