Yamaguchi Aya, Takatsu Kunio, Kishida Osamu
Graduate School of Environmental Science, Hokkaido University, Toikanbetsu, Horonobe, Hokkaido 098-2943, Japan.
Field Science Center for Northern Biosphere, Hokkaido University, Toikanbetsu, Horonobe, Hokkaido 098-2943, Japan.
Ecology. 2016 Nov;97(11):3206-3218. doi: 10.1002/ecy.1543.
Size variation within a population can influence the structure of ecosystem interactions, because ecological performance differs between individuals of different sizes. Although the impact of size variation in a predator species on the structure of interactions is well understood, our knowledge about how size variation in a prey species might modify the interactions between predators and prey is very limited. Here, by examining the interactions between predatory Hynobius retardatus salamander larvae and their prey, Rana pirica frog tadpoles, we investigated how large prey individuals affect the predation mortality of small prey conspecifics. First, in an experiment conducted in a field pond in which we manipulated the presence of salamanders and large tadpoles (i.e., large enough to protect them against salamander predation) with small tadpoles, we showed that in the presence of large tadpoles the mortality of small tadpoles from salamander predation was increased. On the basis of our observations of the activity of individuals, we hypothesized that active large tadpoles caused physical disturbances, which in turn caused the small tadpoles to move, and thus increased their encounter frequency with the predatory salamanders. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a laboratory experiment in small tanks with three players (i.e., one salamander as predator, one small tadpole as focal prey, and either a small or a large tadpole as the prospective movement inducer). In each tank, we manipulated the presence or absence of a movement inducer, and, when present, its size (large or small) and access (caged or uncaged) to the focal prey. In the presence of a large, uncaged movement inducer, the focal prey was more active and suffered from higher predation mortality compared with the other treatments, because the large movement inducer (unlike a small movement inducer) moved actively and, when uncaged, could stimulate movement of the focal prey through direct contact. The results indicated that high activity of large prey individuals and the resulting behavioral interactions with small conspecifics via direct contact indirectly increased the mortality of the small prey.
种群内的体型差异会影响生态系统相互作用的结构,因为不同体型个体的生态表现有所不同。虽然捕食者物种的体型差异对相互作用结构的影响已得到充分理解,但我们对于猎物物种的体型差异如何改变捕食者与猎物之间的相互作用却知之甚少。在此,通过研究捕食性日本山溪鲵幼体与其猎物东北林蛙蝌蚪之间的相互作用,我们探究了大型猎物个体如何影响小型猎物同种个体的捕食死亡率。首先,在一个野外池塘进行的实验中,我们操控了蝾螈和大型蝌蚪(即大到足以保护它们免受蝾螈捕食)与小型蝌蚪的存在情况,结果表明,在有大型蝌蚪存在的情况下,小型蝌蚪因蝾螈捕食而导致的死亡率增加。基于我们对个体活动的观察,我们推测活跃的大型蝌蚪会造成物理干扰,进而导致小型蝌蚪移动,从而增加它们与捕食性蝾螈的遭遇频率。为了验证这一假设,我们在小水箱中进行了一项实验室实验,实验中有三个参与者(即一只作为捕食者的蝾螈、一只作为目标猎物的小型蝌蚪,以及一只作为潜在运动诱导者的小型或大型蝌蚪)。在每个水箱中,我们操控了运动诱导者的有无,以及当运动诱导者存在时,其大小(大型或小型)和进入目标猎物区域的方式(笼养或非笼养)。与其他处理相比,在有大型、非笼养运动诱导者存在的情况下,目标猎物更加活跃,且遭受的捕食死亡率更高,因为大型运动诱导者(与小型运动诱导者不同)会主动移动,并且在非笼养时能够通过直接接触刺激目标猎物移动。结果表明,大型猎物个体的高活跃度以及由此通过直接接触与小型同种个体产生的行为相互作用间接增加了小型猎物的死亡率。