Center for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis, Department of Biology, University of Oslo, Norway.
Am Nat. 2012 Dec;180(6):791-801. doi: 10.1086/668080. Epub 2012 Oct 25.
Ecological interactions determine the structure and dynamics of communities and their responses to the environment. Understanding the community-level effects of ecological interactions, such as intra- and interspecifc competition, predation, and cannibalism, is therefore central to ecological theory and ecosystem management. Here, we investigate the community-level consequences of cannibalism in populations with density-dependent maturation and reproduction. We model a stage-structured consumer population with an ontogenetic diet shift to analyze how cannibalism alters the conditions for the invasion and persistence of stage-specific predators and competitors. Our results demonstrate that cannibalistic interactions can facilitate coexistence with other species at both trophic levels. This effect of cannibalism critically depends on the food dependence of the demographic processes. The underlying mechanism is a cannibalism-induced shift in the biomass distribution between the consumer life stages. These findings suggest that cannibalism may alter the structure of ecological communities through its effects on species coexistence.
生态相互作用决定了群落的结构和动态及其对环境的响应。因此,了解生态相互作用(如种内和种间竞争、捕食和同类相食)对群落水平的影响是生态理论和生态系统管理的核心。在这里,我们研究了在密度依赖成熟和繁殖的种群中同类相食的群落水平后果。我们构建了一个具有阶段结构的消费者种群模型,并进行了一个营养级转换的分析,以研究同类相食如何改变特定阶段捕食者和竞争者入侵和持续存在的条件。我们的结果表明,同类相食的相互作用可以促进在两个营养水平上与其他物种共存。这种同类相食的影响严重依赖于人口统计过程的食物依赖性。潜在的机制是消费者生命阶段之间的生物量分布的同类相食诱导变化。这些发现表明,同类相食可能通过影响物种共存来改变生态群落的结构。