Spencer Matthew, Warren Philip H
Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, S10 2TN, Sheffield, UK.
Oecologia. 1996 Dec;108(4):764-770. doi: 10.1007/BF00329053.
It has been hypothesised that larger habitats should support more complex food webs. We consider three mechanisms which could lead to this pattern. These are increased immigration rates, increased total productivity and spatial effects on the persistence of unstable interactions. Experiments designed to discriminate between these mechanisms were carried out in laboratory aquatic microcosm communities of protista and bacteria, by independently manipulating habitat size, total productivity and immigration rate. Larger habitats supported more complex food webs, with more species, more links per species and longer maximum and mean food chains, even in the absence of differences in total energy input. Increased immigration rate resulted in more complex food webs, but habitats with higher energy input per unit area supported less complex food webs. We conclude that spatial effects on the persistence of unstable interactions, and variation in immigration rates, are plausible mechanisms by which habitat size could affect food web structure. Variation in total productivity with habitat area seems a less likely explanation for variation in food web structure.
有假说认为,更大的栖息地应支持更复杂的食物网。我们考虑了三种可能导致这种模式的机制。这些机制包括增加迁入率、提高总生产力以及对不稳定相互作用的持续性产生空间效应。通过独立操纵栖息地大小、总生产力和迁入率,在原生生物和细菌的实验室水生微观群落中进行了旨在区分这些机制的实验。即使在总能量输入没有差异的情况下,更大的栖息地也支持更复杂的食物网,物种更多,每个物种的联系更多,最长和平均食物链也更长。迁入率增加导致食物网更复杂,但单位面积能量输入较高的栖息地支持的食物网较不复杂。我们得出结论,对不稳定相互作用的持续性产生的空间效应以及迁入率的变化,是栖息地大小可能影响食物网结构的合理机制。总生产力随栖息地面积的变化似乎不太可能解释食物网结构的变化。