ten Brink Hanna, Mazumdar Abul Kalam Azad, Huddart Joseph, Persson Lennart, Cameron Tom C
Ecology & Environmental Sciences, Umeå University, Umeå, 90742, Sweden.
School of Biological Sciences, University of Essex, Colchester, CO4 3SQ, UK.
J Anim Ecol. 2015 Mar;84(2):414-26. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12305. Epub 2014 Nov 24.
Coexistence of predators that share the same prey is common. This is still the case in size-structured predator communities where predators consume prey species of different sizes (interspecific prey responses) or consume different size classes of the same species of prey (intraspecific prey responses). A mechanism has recently been proposed to explain coexistence between predators that differ in size but share the same prey species, emergent facilitation, which is dependent on strong intraspecific responses from one or more prey species. Under emergent facilitation, predators can depend on each other for invasion, persistence or success in a size-structured prey community. Experimental evidence for intraspecific size-structured responses in prey populations remains rare, and further questions remain about direct interactions between predators that could prevent or limit any positive effects between predators [e.g. intraguild predation (IGP)]. Here, we provide a community-wide experiment on emergent facilitation including natural predators. We investigate both the direct interactions between two predators that differ in body size (fish vs. invertebrate predator), and the indirect interaction between them via their shared prey community (zooplankton). Our evidence supports the most likely expectation of interactions between differently sized predators that IGP rates are high, and interspecific interactions in the shared prey community dominate the response to predation (i.e. predator-mediated competition). The question of whether emergent facilitation occurs frequently in nature requires more empirical and theoretical attention, specifically to address the likelihood that its pre-conditions may co-occur with high rates of IGP.
共享相同猎物的捕食者共存的情况很常见。在大小结构的捕食者群落中也是如此,其中捕食者会捕食不同大小的猎物物种(种间猎物反应)或捕食同一猎物物种的不同大小类别(种内猎物反应)。最近有人提出了一种机制来解释大小不同但共享相同猎物物种的捕食者之间的共存,即涌现促进作用,它依赖于一个或多个猎物物种强烈的种内反应。在涌现促进作用下,捕食者在大小结构的猎物群落中可以相互依赖以实现入侵、持续存在或成功。猎物种群中种内大小结构反应的实验证据仍然很少,而且关于捕食者之间可能阻止或限制捕食者之间任何积极影响的直接相互作用(例如种内捕食)仍存在进一步的问题。在这里,我们提供了一个包括自然捕食者在内的关于涌现促进作用的群落范围实验。我们研究了两种体型不同的捕食者(鱼类与无脊椎动物捕食者)之间的直接相互作用,以及它们通过共享猎物群落(浮游动物)之间的间接相互作用。我们的证据支持了对不同大小捕食者之间相互作用的最可能预期,即种内捕食率很高,并且共享猎物群落中的种间相互作用主导了对捕食的反应(即捕食者介导的竞争)。涌现促进作用在自然界中是否经常发生这个问题需要更多的实证和理论关注,特别是要解决其先决条件可能与高种内捕食率同时出现的可能性。