Suppr超能文献

多种相互作用类型决定了森林群落中蚂蚁捕食毛虫的影响。

Multiple interaction types determine the impact of ant predation of caterpillars in a forest community.

作者信息

Clark Robert E, Farkas Timothy E, Lichter-Marck Isaac, Johnson Emily R, Singer Michael S

机构信息

Biology Department, Wesleyan University, 52 Lawn Avenue, Middletown, Connecticut, 06459, USA.

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut, 06269, USA.

出版信息

Ecology. 2016 Dec;97(12):3379-3388. doi: 10.1002/ecy.1571. Epub 2016 Nov 10.

Abstract

Direct and indirect effects of predators are highly variable in complex communities, and understanding the sources of this variation is a research priority in community ecology. Recent evidence indicates that herbivore community structure is a primary determinant of predation strength and its cascading impacts on plants. In this study, we use variation in herbivore community structure among plant species to experimentally test two hypotheses in a temperate forest food web. First, variation in the strength of predator effects, such as ant predation of caterpillars, is predicted to be density dependent, exhibiting stronger effects when prey abundance is high (density-dependent predation hypothesis). Second, mutualistic interactions between ants and sap-feeding herbivores are expected to increase the abundance of predatory ants, strengthening predation effects on herbivores with cascading effects on host plants (keystone mutualism hypothesis). Using a large-scale predator exclusion experiment across eight dominant tree species, we tracked changes in insect density on 862 plants across two years, recording 2,322 ants, 1,062 sap-feeders, 5,322 caterpillars, and quantifying herbivory on 199, 338 leaves. In this experiment, density-dependent predation did not explain variation in the direct or indirect effects of ants on caterpillars and herbivory. In partial support of the keystone mutualism hypothesis, sap-feeders strengthened top-down effects of ants on caterpillars under some conditions. However, stronger ant predation of caterpillars did not lead to measurable trophic cascades on trees occupied by sap-feeders. Instead, the presence of sap-feeders was associated with increased per capita feeding damage by caterpillars, and this bottom-up effect attenuated the indirect effects of ants on host plants. These findings demonstrate that examining the multi-trophic impacts of mutualisms and predation in the context of the broader community can reveal patterns otherwise masked by compensatory interactions.

摘要

在复杂群落中,捕食者的直接和间接影响具有高度变异性,而了解这种变异的来源是群落生态学的一个研究重点。最近的证据表明,食草动物群落结构是捕食强度及其对植物级联影响的主要决定因素。在本研究中,我们利用植物物种间食草动物群落结构的差异,在温带森林食物网中对两个假设进行了实验检验。第一,捕食者影响的强度变化,如蚂蚁对毛虫的捕食,预计是密度依赖的,当猎物丰度高时表现出更强的影响(密度依赖捕食假设)。第二,蚂蚁与吸食树液的食草动物之间的互利共生相互作用预计会增加捕食性蚂蚁的数量,加强对食草动物的捕食作用,并对寄主植物产生级联影响(关键互利共生假设)。通过对八种优势树种进行大规模的捕食者排除实验,我们在两年内跟踪了862株植物上昆虫密度的变化,记录了2322只蚂蚁、1062只吸食树液者、5322只毛虫,并对199338片叶子上的食草作用进行了量化。在这个实验中,密度依赖捕食并不能解释蚂蚁对毛虫和食草作用的直接或间接影响的变化。在一定程度上支持关键互利共生假设,吸食树液者在某些条件下加强了蚂蚁对毛虫的自上而下的影响。然而,蚂蚁对毛虫更强的捕食并没有导致在有吸食树液者占据的树上出现可测量的营养级联。相反,吸食树液者的存在与毛虫人均取食损害的增加有关,这种自下而上的效应削弱了蚂蚁对寄主植物的间接影响。这些发现表明,在更广泛的群落背景下研究互利共生和捕食的多营养级影响,可以揭示那些否则会被补偿性相互作用掩盖的模式。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验