Brown Marion B, Schlacher Thomas A, Schoeman David S, Weston Michael A, Huijbers Chantal M, Olds Andrew D, Connolly Rod M
Ecology. 2015 Oct;96(10):2715-25. doi: 10.1890/15-0027.1.
Species composition is expected to alter ecological function in assemblages if species traits differ strongly. Such effects are often large and persistent for nonnative carnivores invading islands. Alternatively, high similarity in traits within assemblages creates a degree of functional redundancy in ecosystems. Here we tested whether species turnover results in functional ecological equivalence or complementarity, and whether invasive carnivores on islands significantly alter such ecological function. The model system consisted of vertebrate scavengers (dominated by raptors) foraging on animal carcasses on ocean beaches on two Australian islands, one with and one without invasive red foxes (Vulpes vulpes). Partitioning of scavenging events among species, carcass removal rates, and detection speeds were quantified using camera traps baited with fish carcasses at the dune-beach interface. Complete segregation of temporal foraging niches between mammals (nocturnal) and birds (diurnal) reflects complementarity in carrion utilization. Conversely, functional redundancy exists within the bird guild where several species of raptors dominate carrion removal in a broadly similar way. As predicted, effects of red foxes were large. They substantially changed the nature and rate of the scavenging process in the system: (1) foxes consumed over half (55%) of all carrion available at night, compared with negligible mammalian foraging at night on the fox-free island, and (2) significant shifts in the composition of the scavenger assemblages consuming beach-cast carrion are the consequence of fox invasion at one island. Arguably, in the absence of other mammalian apex predators, the addition of red foxes creates a new dimension of functional complementarity in beach food webs. However, this functional complementarity added by foxes is neither benign nor neutral, as marine carrion subsidies to coastal red fox populations are likely to facilitate their persistence as exotic carnivores.
如果物种特征差异很大,那么物种组成有望改变群落中的生态功能。对于入侵岛屿的非本地食肉动物而言,这种影响通常很大且持久。另外,群落内特征的高度相似性在生态系统中产生了一定程度的功能冗余。在此,我们测试了物种更替是否会导致功能生态等效或互补,以及岛屿上的入侵食肉动物是否会显著改变这种生态功能。该模型系统由脊椎动物食腐动物(以猛禽为主)组成,它们在澳大利亚的两个岛屿的海滩上觅食动物尸体,其中一个岛屿有入侵的赤狐(赤狐),另一个没有。在沙丘 - 海滩交界处,使用装有鱼尸体的相机陷阱对物种间的觅食事件划分、尸体清除率和探测速度进行了量化。哺乳动物(夜间活动)和鸟类(白天活动)在时间觅食生态位上的完全隔离反映了在腐肉利用方面的互补性。相反,在鸟类群落中存在功能冗余,其中几种猛禽以大致相似的方式主导着腐肉清除。正如预测的那样,赤狐的影响很大。它们极大地改变了系统中觅食过程的性质和速度:(1)狐狸在夜间消耗了所有可用腐肉的一半以上(55%),而在没有狐狸的岛屿上,夜间哺乳动物的觅食可以忽略不计;(2)在一个岛屿上,赤狐入侵导致了食用海滩弃尸的食腐动物群落组成发生了显著变化。可以说,在没有其他哺乳动物顶级捕食者的情况下,赤狐的加入在海滩食物网中创造了功能互补的新维度。然而,狐狸增加的这种功能互补既非良性也非中性,因为海洋腐肉对沿海赤狐种群的补贴可能会促进它们作为外来食肉动物的存续。