Department of Biological Sciences and Climate Risk CoRE, Macquarie University, North Ryde, NSW, 2109, Australia.
Oecologia. 2010 Jun;163(2):517-25. doi: 10.1007/s00442-009-1555-y. Epub 2010 Jan 10.
Food webs of many ecosystems are sustained by organic matter from other habitats. Human activities and climatic change are increasingly modifying the quality and supply of these resources, yet for most ecosystems it is unknown how the taxonomic composition of organic matter influences community composition. Along the coastline of Sydney, Australia, the once abundant habitat-forming macroalga, Phyllospora comosa, is now locally extinct. Shallow reefs are now primarily occupied by Sargassum sp. and, to a lesser extent, the kelp Ecklonia radiata. We experimentally manipulated the supply of P. comosa, Sargassum sp. and E. radiata to estuarine sediments to assess responses by macroinvertebrate communities to: (1) changing the identity of the dominant detrital resource; and (2) varying the ratio of input of different macrophytes. Estuarine sediments dosed with P. comosa supported greater abundances of macroinvertebrates than sediments receiving Sargassum sp. or the kelp E. radiata. Whereas plots receiving Sargassum sp. or E. radiata had fewer macroinvertebrates than controls, plots receiving a moderate (120 g dry weight per m(2)) loading of P. comosa had more. Mixtures of detritus dominated by P. comosa supported similar macroinvertebrate communities to monocultures of the alga. Communities in sediments receiving detritus comprised of less than one-third P. comosa were, however, distinctly different. Our study provides evidence that the ecological ramifications of species decline can extend to spatially removed ecosystems, subsidized by allochthonous materials. Even prior to extinction of detrital sources, small changes in their provision of organic matter may alter the structure of subsidized communities.
许多生态系统的食物网依赖于来自其他栖息地的有机物质得以维持。人类活动和气候变化正日益改变这些资源的质量和供应,但对于大多数生态系统而言,有机物质的分类组成如何影响群落组成仍不清楚。在澳大利亚悉尼的海岸线上,曾经丰富的造礁海藻 Phyllospora comosa 现在已在当地灭绝。浅礁现在主要由 Sargassum sp. 和程度较小的褐藻 Ecklonia radiata 占据。我们通过实验操纵 P. comosa、Sargassum sp. 和 E. radiata 对河口沉积物的供应,以评估大型无脊椎动物群落对以下两种情况的响应:(1)改变主要碎屑资源的身份;(2)改变不同大型植物输入的比例。与接受 Sargassum sp. 或褐藻 E. radiata 的沉积物相比,接受 P. comosa 的河口沉积物支持了更多的大型无脊椎动物。尽管接受 Sargassum sp. 或 E. radiata 的样本比对照样本中的大型无脊椎动物少,但接受 P. comosa 适度(每平方米 120 克干重)负荷的样本则更多。以 P. comosa 为主的碎屑混合物支持的大型无脊椎动物群落与藻类的单培养物相似。然而,在接受碎屑组成中 P. comosa 不到三分之一的沉积物中的群落则明显不同。我们的研究提供了证据,表明物种减少的生态后果可以延伸到空间上分离的生态系统,这些系统由异源物质补贴。即使在碎屑源灭绝之前,它们提供有机物质的微小变化也可能改变补贴群落的结构。