Gibert Jean P, DeLong John P
School of Biological Sciences, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 410 Manter Hall, Lincoln, Nebraska 68588-0118, USA
School of Biological Sciences, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 410 Manter Hall, Lincoln, Nebraska 68588-0118, USA.
Biol Lett. 2014 Aug;10(8). doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2014.0473.
The increased temperature associated with climate change may have important effects on body size and predator-prey interactions. The consequences of these effects for food web structure are unclear because the relationships between temperature and aspects of food web structure such as predator-prey body-size relationships are unknown. Here, we use the largest reported dataset for marine predator-prey interactions to assess how temperature affects predator-prey body-size relationships among different habitats ranging from the tropics to the poles. We found that prey size selection depends on predator body size, temperature and the interaction between the two. Our results indicate that (i) predator-prey body-size ratios decrease with predator size at below-average temperatures and increase with predator size at above-average temperatures, and (ii) that the effect of temperature on predator-prey body-size structure will be stronger at small and large body sizes and relatively weak at intermediate sizes. This systematic interaction may help to simplify forecasting the potentially complex consequences of warming on interaction strengths and food web stability.
与气候变化相关的气温升高可能会对体型以及捕食者与猎物的相互作用产生重要影响。这些影响对食物网结构的后果尚不清楚,因为温度与食物网结构各方面(如捕食者与猎物的体型关系)之间的关系尚不明朗。在此,我们使用已报道的关于海洋捕食者与猎物相互作用的最大数据集,来评估温度如何影响从热带到极地不同栖息地的捕食者与猎物的体型关系。我们发现猎物大小的选择取决于捕食者的体型、温度以及二者之间的相互作用。我们的结果表明:(i)在低于平均温度时,捕食者与猎物的体型比随捕食者体型减小,而在高于平均温度时,随捕食者体型增大;(ii)温度对捕食者与猎物体型结构的影响在体型较小和较大时更强,而在中等体型时相对较弱。这种系统性的相互作用可能有助于简化对变暖对相互作用强度和食物网稳定性潜在复杂后果的预测。