Takatsu Kunio, Kishida Osamu
Ecology. 2015 Jul;96(7):1887-98. doi: 10.1890/14-1616.1.
Although natural populations consist of individuals with different traits, and the degree of phenotypic variation varies among populations, the impact of phenotypic variation on ecological interactions has received little attention, because traditional approaches to community ecology assume homogeneity of individuals within a population. Stage structure, which is a common way of generating size and developmental variation within predator populations, can drive cannibalistic interactions, which can affect the strength of predatory effects on the predator's heterospecific prey. Studies have shown that predator cannibalism weakens predatory effects on heterospecific prey by reducing the size of the predator population and by inducing less feeding activity of noncannibal predators. We predict, however, that predator cannibalism, by promoting rapid growth of the cannibals, can also intensify predation pressure on heterospecific prey, because large predators have large resource requirements and may utilize a wider variety of prey species. To test this hypothesis, we conducted an experiment in which we created carnivorous salamander (Hynobius retardatus) populations with different stage structures by manipulating the salamander's hatch timing (i.e., populations with large or small variation in the timing of hatching), and explored the resultant impacts on the abundance, behavior, morphology, and life history of the salamander's large heterospecific prey, Rana pirica frog tadpoles. Cannibalism was rare in salamander populations having small hatch-timing variation, but was frequent in those having large hatch-timing variation. Thus, giant salamander cannibals occurred only in the latter. We clearly showed that salamander giants exerted strong predation pressure on frog tadpoles, which induced large behavioral and morphological defenses in the tadpoles and caused them to metamorphose late at large size. Hence, predator cannibalism arising from large variation in the timing of hatching can strengthen predatory effects on heterospecific prey and can have impacts on various, traits of both predator and prey. Because animals commonly broaden their diet as they grow, such negative impacts of predator cannibalism on the heterospecific prey may be common in interactions between predators and prey species of similar size.
虽然自然种群由具有不同性状的个体组成,且表型变异程度在种群间有所不同,但表型变异对生态相互作用的影响却很少受到关注,因为传统的群落生态学方法假定种群内个体具有同质性。阶段结构是在捕食者种群中产生大小和发育变异的一种常见方式,它能驱动同类相食的相互作用,进而影响捕食者对其异种猎物的捕食效应强度。研究表明,捕食者同类相食会通过减少捕食者种群规模以及诱导非同类相食捕食者减少摄食活动,从而削弱对异种猎物的捕食效应。然而,我们预测,捕食者同类相食通过促进同类相食者的快速生长,也可能增强对异种猎物的捕食压力,因为大型捕食者有较大的资源需求,可能会利用更多种类的猎物。为了验证这一假设,我们进行了一项实验,通过操控蝾螈的孵化时间(即孵化时间变异大或小的种群)来创建具有不同阶段结构的肉食性蝾螈(日本林蛙)种群,并探究其对蝾螈的大型异种猎物——日本林蛙蝌蚪的数量、行为、形态和生活史所产生的影响。在孵化时间变异小的蝾螈种群中,同类相食现象很少见,但在孵化时间变异大的种群中则很常见。因此,巨型蝾螈同类相食者只出现在后者中。我们清楚地表明,巨型蝾螈对蛙蝌蚪施加了强大的捕食压力,这在蝌蚪中诱发了强烈的行为和形态防御,并导致它们在体型较大时延迟变态。因此,由孵化时间的巨大变异引起的捕食者同类相食能够增强对异种猎物的捕食效应,并对捕食者和猎物的各种性状产生影响。由于动物通常会随着生长而拓宽其饮食范围,捕食者同类相食对异种猎物的这种负面影响在大小相似的捕食者和猎物物种之间的相互作用中可能很常见。