Sato Takuya, El-Sabaawi Rana W, Campbell Kirsten, Ohta Tamihisa, Richardson John S
The Hakubi Center for Advanced Research, Kyoto University, Yoshida-honmachi, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto, 606-8501, Japan.
Department of Biology, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC, V8W 3N5, Canada.
J Anim Ecol. 2016 Sep;85(5):1136-46. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12516. Epub 2016 Apr 21.
Spatial resource subsidies can alter bottom-up and top-down forces of community regulation across ecosystem boundaries. Most subsidies are temporally variable, and recent theory has suggested that consumer-resource dynamics can be stabilized if the peak timing of a subsidy is desynchronized with that of prey productivity in the recipient ecosystem. However, magnitude of consumer responses per se could depend on the subsidy timing, which may be a critical component for community dynamics and ecosystem processes. The aim of this study was to test (i) whether a recipient consumer (cutthroat trout) responds differently to a resource subsidy occurring early in its growing season than to a subsidy occurring late in the season and, if this is the case, (ii) whether the timing-dependent consumer response has cascading effects on communities and ecosystem functions in streams. To test those hypotheses, we conducted a large-scale field experiment, in which we directly manipulated the timing of augmentation of the terrestrial invertebrates that enter stream (i.e. peak timing of June-August vs. August-October), keeping constant the total amounts of the invertebrates entered. We found large increases in the individual growth rate and population biomass of the cutthroat trout, in response to the early resource pulse, but not to the late pulse. This timing-dependent consumer response cascaded down to reduce benthic invertebrates and leaf breakdown rate, and increased water nutrient concentrations. Furthermore, the early resource pulse resulted in higher maturity rate of the cutthroat trout in the following spring, demonstrating the importance of the subsidy timing on long-term community dynamics via the consumer's numerical response. Our results emphasize the need to acknowledge timing-dependent consumer responses in understanding the effects of subsidies on communities and ecosystem processes. Elucidating the mechanisms by which consumers effectively exploit pulsed subsidies is an important avenue to better understand community dynamics in spatially coupled ecosystems.
空间资源补贴能够改变跨越生态系统边界的群落调节的自下而上和自上而下的力量。大多数补贴在时间上是可变的,并且最近的理论表明,如果补贴的峰值时间与受援生态系统中猎物生产力的峰值时间不同步,那么消费者 - 资源动态就可以得到稳定。然而,消费者反应的幅度本身可能取决于补贴时间,这可能是群落动态和生态系统过程的一个关键组成部分。本研究的目的是测试:(i)受援消费者(虹鳟鱼)对其生长季节早期出现的资源补贴的反应是否不同于对季节后期出现的补贴的反应,如果是这种情况,(ii)这种依赖时间的消费者反应是否对溪流中的群落和生态系统功能具有级联效应。为了检验这些假设,我们进行了一项大规模的野外实验,在实验中我们直接操纵进入溪流的陆生无脊椎动物增加的时间(即6月至8月与8月至10月的峰值时间),同时保持进入的无脊椎动物总量不变。我们发现,虹鳟鱼的个体生长率和种群生物量因早期资源脉冲而大幅增加,但对晚期脉冲没有反应。这种依赖时间的消费者反应向下级联,减少了底栖无脊椎动物和叶片分解率,并增加了水体养分浓度。此外,早期资源脉冲导致次年春季虹鳟鱼的成熟率更高,这表明补贴时间通过消费者的数量反应对长期群落动态具有重要性。我们的结果强调,在理解补贴对群落和生态系统过程的影响时,需要认识到依赖时间的消费者反应。阐明消费者有效利用脉冲补贴的机制是更好地理解空间耦合生态系统中群落动态的重要途径。