Kwan Christopher Kent, Sanford Eric, Long Jeremy
Biology Department and Coastal & Marine Institute Laboratory, San Diego State University, San Diego, California, United States of America; Bodega Marine Laboratory and Department of Evolution and Ecology, University of California Davis, Bodega Bay, California, United States of America.
Bodega Marine Laboratory and Department of Evolution and Ecology, University of California Davis, Bodega Bay, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Jul 14;10(7):e0133329. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0133329. eCollection 2015.
Although the cascading impact of predators depends critically on the relative role of lethal predation and predation risk, we lack an understanding of how human-caused stressors may shift this balance. Emergent evidence suggests that pollution may increase the importance of predator consumptive effects by weakening the effects of fear perceived by prey. However, this oversimplification ignores the possibility that pollution may also alter predator consumptive effects. In particular, contaminants may impair the consumptive effects of predators by altering density-dependent interactions among prey conspecifics. No study has directly compared predator consumptive and non-consumptive effects in polluted versus non-polluted settings. We addressed this issue by using laboratory mesocosms to examine the impact of sublethal doses of copper on tri-trophic interactions among estuarine predator crabs Cancer productus, carnivorous whelk prey Urosalpinx cinerea, and the basal resource barnacles Balanus glandula. We investigated crab consumptive effects (whelks culled without crab chemical cues), non-consumptive effects (whelks not culled with crab chemical cues), and total effects (whelks culled with crab chemical cues) on whelks in copper polluted and non-polluted waters. Realistic copper concentrations suppressed the effects of simulated crab lethal predation (whelk culling) by removing density-dependent feeding by whelks. Specifically, reductions in conspecific density occurring in elevated copper levels did not trigger the normal increase in whelk consumption rates of barnacles. Weakened effects of fear were only observed at extremely high copper levels, suggesting consumptive effects were more sensitive to pollution. Thus, pollution may shape communities by altering the roles of predators and interactions among prey.
尽管捕食者的级联影响关键取决于致死性捕食和捕食风险的相对作用,但我们并不了解人为压力源如何改变这种平衡。新出现的证据表明,污染可能通过削弱猎物感知到的恐惧效应来增加捕食者消费效应的重要性。然而,这种过度简化忽略了污染也可能改变捕食者消费效应的可能性。特别是,污染物可能通过改变猎物同种个体之间的密度依赖性相互作用来损害捕食者的消费效应。没有研究直接比较过污染环境与未污染环境中捕食者的消费效应和非消费效应。我们通过使用实验室中宇宙来研究亚致死剂量的铜对河口捕食性螃蟹(太平洋蝉蟹)、食肉性海螺猎物(灰色尾号蛾螺)和基础资源藤壶(腺藤壶)之间三营养级相互作用的影响,从而解决了这个问题。我们调查了螃蟹在铜污染和未污染水域中对海螺的消费效应(在没有螃蟹化学信号的情况下捕杀的海螺)、非消费效应(在有螃蟹化学信号的情况下未捕杀的海螺)和总效应(在有螃蟹化学信号的情况下捕杀的海螺)。实际的铜浓度通过消除海螺的密度依赖性摄食来抑制模拟螃蟹致死性捕食(海螺捕杀)的效应。具体而言,铜含量升高时同种密度的降低并未引发海螺对藤壶消费率的正常增加。仅在极高的铜含量水平下才观察到恐惧效应减弱,这表明消费效应对污染更敏感。因此,污染可能通过改变捕食者的作用和猎物之间的相互作用来塑造群落。