Department of Biology, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19122, USA.
Ecology. 2011 Apr;92(4):983-93. doi: 10.1890/09-2379.1.
Species interactions are widely assumed to be stronger at lower latitudes, but surprisingly few experimental studies test this hypothesis, and none ties these processes to observed patterns of species richness across latitude. We report here the first experimental field test that predation is both stronger and has a disproportionate effect on species richness in the tropics relative to the temperate zone. We conducted predator-exclusion experiments on communities of sessile marine invertebrates in four regions, which span 32 degrees latitude, in the western Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea. Over a three-month timescale, predation had no effect on species richness in the temperate zone. In the tropics, however, communities were from two to over ten times more species-rich in the absence of predators than when predators were present. While micro-and macro-predators likely compete for the limited prey resource in the tropics, micropredators alone were able to exert as much pressure on the invertebrate communities as the full predator community. This result highlights the extent to which exposure to even a subset of the predator guild can significantly impact species richness in the tropics. Patterns were consistent in analyses that included relative and total species abundances. Higher species richness in the absence of predators in the tropics was also observed when species occurrences were pooled across two larger spatial scales, site and region, demonstrating a consistent scaling relationship. These experimental results show that predation can both limit local species abundances and shape patterns of regional coexistence in the tropics. When preestablished diverse tropical communities were then exposed to predation for different durations, ranging from one to several days, species richness was always reduced. These findings confirmed that impacts of predation in the tropics are strong and consistent, even in more established communities. Our results offer empirical support for the long-held prediction that predation pressure is stronger at lower latitudes. Furthermore, we demonstrate the magnitude to which variation in predation pressure can contribute to the maintenance of tropical species diversity.
物种相互作用被广泛认为在低纬度地区更强,但令人惊讶的是,很少有实验研究检验这一假设,也没有将这些过程与观察到的物种丰富度模式联系起来。我们在这里报告了第一个实验性野外测试,表明捕食作用在热带地区相对于温带地区不仅更强,而且对物种丰富度的影响不成比例。我们在西大西洋和加勒比海的四个地区进行了有附着海洋无脊椎动物群落的捕食者排除实验,这些地区跨越了 32 度的纬度。在三个月的时间内,捕食对温带地区的物种丰富度没有影响。然而,在热带地区,没有捕食者时的群落物种丰富度是有捕食者时的两到十倍以上。虽然微捕食者和大捕食者可能会争夺热带地区有限的猎物资源,但微捕食者单独对无脊椎动物群落施加的压力与整个捕食者群落一样大。这一结果突出表明,即使接触捕食者群体的一小部分,也会对热带地区的物种丰富度产生重大影响。包括相对和总物种丰度在内的分析结果一致。当在两个更大的空间尺度(地点和区域)上汇总物种出现时,热带地区没有捕食者时的物种丰富度也更高,这表明存在一致的尺度关系。这些实验结果表明,捕食不仅可以限制当地物种的丰度,还可以塑造热带地区的区域共存模式。当预先建立的多样化热带群落暴露于捕食者的时间不同(从一天到几天)时,物种丰富度总是会降低。这些发现证实了热带地区捕食的影响是强烈而一致的,即使在更成熟的群落中也是如此。我们的结果为长期以来的预测提供了经验支持,即捕食压力在低纬度地区更强。此外,我们证明了捕食压力的变化在多大程度上有助于维持热带物种多样性。