Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Biol Lett. 2010 Aug 23;6(4):449-52. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2009.1082. Epub 2010 Feb 17.
Dispersal is a central process determining community structure in heterogeneous landscapes, and species interactions within habitats may be a major determinant of dispersal. Although the effects of species interactions on dispersal within habitats have been well studied, how species interactions affect the movement of individuals between habitats in a landscape has received less attention. We conducted two experiments to assess the extent to which predation risk affects dispersal from an aquatic habitat by a flight-capable semi-aquatic insect (Notonecta undulata). Exposure to non-lethal (caged) fish fed conspecifics increased dispersal rates in N. undulata. Moreover, dispersal rate was positively correlated with the level of risk imposed by the fish; the greater the number of notonectids consumed by the caged fish, the greater the dispersal rate from the habitat. These results suggest that risk within a habitat can affect dispersal among habitats in a landscape and thus affect community structure on a much greater scale than the direct effect of predation itself.
扩散是决定异质景观中群落结构的核心过程,而栖息地内的物种相互作用可能是扩散的主要决定因素。尽管物种相互作用对栖息地内扩散的影响已经得到了很好的研究,但物种相互作用如何影响景观中个体在栖息地之间的移动却受到较少关注。我们进行了两项实验,以评估捕食风险在多大程度上影响了具有飞行能力的半水生昆虫(Notonecta undulata)从水生栖息地的扩散。暴露于非致命(笼养)鱼类喂食同种鱼类会增加 N. undulata 的扩散率。此外,扩散率与鱼类施加的风险水平呈正相关;被笼养鱼吃掉的 notonectids 越多,从栖息地的扩散率就越高。这些结果表明,栖息地内的风险会影响景观中栖息地之间的扩散,从而以比捕食本身的直接影响大得多的规模影响群落结构。