Orwin Kate H, Wardle David A, Towns David R, St John Mark G, Bellingham Peter J, Jones Chris, Fitzgerald Brian M, Parrish Richard G, Lyver Phil O'B
Landcare Research, PO Box 69040, Lincoln, 7640, New Zealand.
Department of Forest Ecology and Management, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, 901-83, Umeå, Sweden.
Oecologia. 2016 Jan;180(1):217-30. doi: 10.1007/s00442-015-3437-9. Epub 2015 Sep 26.
Vertebrate consumers can be important drivers of the structure and functioning of ecosystems, including the soil and litter invertebrate communities that drive many ecosystem processes. Burrowing seabirds, as prevalent vertebrate consumers, have the potential to impact consumptive effects via adding marine nutrients to soil (i.e. resource subsidies) and non-consumptive effects via soil disturbance associated with excavating burrows (i.e. ecosystem engineering). However, the exact mechanisms by which they influence invertebrates are poorly understood. We examined how soil chemistry and plant and invertebrate communities changed across a gradient of seabird burrow density on two islands in northern New Zealand. Increasing seabird burrow density was associated with increased soil nutrient availability and changes in plant community structure and the abundance of nearly all the measured invertebrate groups. Increasing seabird densities had a negative effect on invertebrates that were strongly influenced by soil-surface litter, a positive effect on fungal-feeding invertebrates, and variable effects on invertebrate groups with diverse feeding strategies. Gastropoda and Araneae species richness and composition were also influenced by seabird activity. Generalized multilevel path analysis revealed that invertebrate responses were strongly driven by seabird engineering effects, via increased soil disturbance, reduced soil-surface litter, and changes in trophic interactions. Almost no significant effects of resource subsidies were detected. Our results show that seabirds, and in particular their non-consumptive effects, were significant drivers of invertebrate food web structure. Reductions in seabird populations, due to predation and human activity, may therefore have far-reaching consequences for the functioning of these ecosystems.
脊椎动物消费者可能是生态系统结构和功能的重要驱动因素,包括驱动许多生态系统过程的土壤和凋落物无脊椎动物群落。穴居海鸟作为常见的脊椎动物消费者,有可能通过向土壤中添加海洋养分(即资源补贴)来影响消费效应,并通过与挖掘洞穴相关的土壤扰动(即生态系统工程)产生非消费效应。然而,它们影响无脊椎动物的确切机制却鲜为人知。我们研究了新西兰北部两个岛屿上,土壤化学、植物和无脊椎动物群落如何随着海鸟洞穴密度梯度的变化而改变。海鸟洞穴密度的增加与土壤养分有效性的提高、植物群落结构的变化以及几乎所有被测无脊椎动物类群的丰度变化有关。海鸟密度的增加对受土壤表面凋落物强烈影响的无脊椎动物有负面影响,对以真菌为食的无脊椎动物有正面影响,对具有不同取食策略的无脊椎动物类群有不同影响。腹足纲和蜘蛛纲的物种丰富度和组成也受到海鸟活动的影响。广义多水平路径分析表明,无脊椎动物的反应主要是由海鸟的工程效应驱动的,这种效应通过增加土壤扰动、减少土壤表面凋落物以及营养相互作用的变化来实现。几乎没有检测到资源补贴的显著影响。我们的结果表明,海鸟,特别是它们的非消费效应,是无脊椎动物食物网结构的重要驱动因素。因此,由于捕食和人类活动导致的海鸟数量减少,可能会对这些生态系统的功能产生深远影响。