Ellis Julie C, Shulman Myra J, Wood Megan, Witman Jon D, Lozyniak Sara
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Box G-W, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912, USA.
Ecology. 2007 Apr;88(4):853-63. doi: 10.1890/06-0593.
Although there is a large body of research on food webs in rocky intertidal communities, most of the emphasis has been on the marine benthic components. Effects of avian predation on highly mobile predators such as crabs, remains practically unstudied in rocky shore ecosystems. The crab, Cancer borealis, is an important component of the diet of gulls (Larus marinus, L. argentatus) at the Isles of Shoals, Maine, USA. C. borealis prey include the predatory gastropod Nucella lapillus L., the herbivore Littorina littorea, and mussels Mytilus edulis L. We hypothesized that gulls reduce abundance of C. borealis in the low intertidal and shallow subtidal, thereby allowing C. borealis prey to persist in high numbers. A study of crab tidal migration showed that C. borealis density nearly doubled at high tide compared to low tide; thus, crabs from a large subtidal source population migrate into the intertidal zone during high tides and either emigrate or are removed by gulls during low tides. Results from a small-scale (1 m2) predator caging experiment in the low intertidal zone indicated that enclosed crabs significantly reduced L. littorea abundance when protected from gull predation. In a much larger-scale gull exclusion experiment, densities of C. borealis increased significantly during low and high tides in exclosures relative to the controls. C. borealis density was inversely correlated with changes in the abundance of two mesopredators Carcinus maenas and Nucella lapillus, and with the space-occupier M. edulis. There was a similar negative correlation between abundance of C. borealis and the change in abundance of the herbivore L. littorea, but the trend was not significant. Mortality of tethered L. littorea was associated with C. borealis density across sites. However, preferred algae did not change in response to L. littorea density during the experiment. Thus, we found suggestive, but not conclusive, evidence for a three-level cascade involving gulls, crabs, and L. littorea. Our studies strongly suggest that gulls, as apex predators, generate three-level trophic cascades in rocky intertidal food webs by preventing the highly mobile subtidal predator, C. borealis, from establishing substantial populations in the low-mid intertidal zone thereby indirectly enhancing densities of two key mesopredators (N. lapillus, Carcinus) and blue mussels (M. edulis).
尽管有大量关于岩石潮间带群落食物网的研究,但大部分重点都放在了海洋底栖生物成分上。在岩石海岸生态系统中,鸟类捕食对诸如螃蟹等高度移动的捕食者的影响实际上仍未得到研究。螃蟹(北方黄道蟹)是美国缅因州浅滩群岛上鸥类(大黑背鸥、银鸥)食物的重要组成部分。北方黄道蟹的猎物包括捕食性腹足动物粗糙滨螺、草食性的滨螺以及紫贻贝。我们假设鸥类会降低低潮间带和浅亚潮带北方黄道蟹的数量,从而使北方黄道蟹的猎物大量存活。一项关于螃蟹潮汐迁移的研究表明,与低潮时相比,高潮时北方黄道蟹的密度几乎翻倍;因此,来自大型亚潮带源种群的螃蟹在高潮时迁移到潮间带区域,在低潮时要么迁出,要么被鸥类捕食。在低潮间带区域进行的小规模(1平方米)捕食者笼养实验结果表明,当免受鸥类捕食时,被圈养的螃蟹显著降低了滨螺的数量。在一个规模大得多的鸥类排除实验中,与对照组相比,围栏内低潮和高潮时北方黄道蟹的密度显著增加。北方黄道蟹的密度与两种中型捕食者(欧洲绿蟹和粗糙滨螺)数量的变化以及空间占据者紫贻贝呈负相关。北方黄道蟹的数量与草食性滨螺数量的变化之间也存在类似的负相关,但趋势不显著。在各个地点,被拴系的滨螺的死亡率与北方黄道蟹的密度相关。然而,在实验过程中,偏好的藻类并没有随着滨螺密度的变化而改变。因此,我们发现了涉及鸥类、螃蟹和滨螺的三级级联效应的暗示性但非决定性证据。我们的研究强烈表明,作为顶级捕食者的鸥类通过阻止高度移动的亚潮带捕食者北方黄道蟹在中低潮间带区域建立大量种群,从而在岩石潮间带食物网中产生三级营养级联效应,进而间接提高了两种关键中型捕食者(粗糙滨螺、欧洲绿蟹)和蓝贻贝(紫贻贝)的密度。