Hart David D, Merz Rachel Ann
Patrick Center for Environmental Research, Academy of Natural Sciences, 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19103-1195, USA Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6018, USA Fax: 215-299-1079; e-mail:
Department of Biology, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, PA 19081-1397, USA, , , , , , US.
Oecologia. 1998 Apr;114(2):263-273. doi: 10.1007/s004420050445.
Ecological theory suggests that the impact of predation can be strongly modified by the existence of regions of the environment in which prey are less accessible to predators, which underscores the need for empirical studies examining the factors influencing the availability and importance of such prey refuges. Our study tested whether benthic microhabitats with high flows provide suspension-feeding larval black flies (Simulium␣vittatum) with a spatial refuge in which the negative impact of predatory flatworms (Dugesia dorotocephala) is reduced. We conducted a short-term field experiment in Chester Creek (southeastern Pennsylvania, United States) to examine how the number of black fly larvae inhabiting tile substrates responded to manipulated variations in flatworm abundance and current speed. The abundance of flatworms declined with increasing current speed, thereby creating the potential for sites with high flows to provide larvae with a refuge from these predators. Multiple regression analysis revealed that the final abundance of larvae exhibited a significant negative relationship to flatworm abundance and a significant positive relationship to current speed. After adjusting for variations in elapsed time and initial larval abundance, flow and predators explained 38% of the variation in the rate of change in larval abundance. The positive correlation between larval abundance and flow had two components: a positive, direct effect of flow on larvae, which arises because these food-limited consumers prefer to reside within sites with faster flows where they can feed at higher rates; and a negative effect of flow on predators, and of predators on larvae, which combine to yield a positive indirect effect of flow on larvae. This indirect effect demonstrates the existence of flow-mediated refuges (i.e., microhabitats in which the impact of predation is reduced due to high flows), although the effect accounts for a small proportion of total variation in larval abundance. A consideration of biomechanical relationships suggests that microhabitats with high flows are likely to create prey refuges in a wide range of freshwater and marine benthic environments. In particular, predators will often experience greater dislodgement forces than prey because of their larger size and because they project farther above the bed where current speeds are faster. Moreover, the ability to resist a given dislodgement force may be greater for many prey, especially those that are sessile or semi- sessile.
生态理论表明,捕食的影响会因环境中存在一些区域而被显著改变,在这些区域中捕食者较难接触到猎物,这突出了开展实证研究以考察影响此类猎物避难所的可利用性及重要性的因素的必要性。我们的研究测试了高水流的底栖微生境是否为滤食性黑蝇幼虫(Simulium vittatum)提供了一个空间避难所,在其中捕食性扁形虫(Dugesia dorotocephala)的负面影响得以减轻。我们在美国宾夕法尼亚州东南部的切斯特溪开展了一项短期野外实验,以考察栖息在瓦片基质上的黑蝇幼虫数量如何响应扁形虫丰度和水流速度的人为改变。扁形虫的丰度随着水流速度的增加而下降,从而使得高水流区域有可能为幼虫提供躲避这些捕食者的避难所。多元回归分析显示,幼虫的最终丰度与扁形虫丰度呈显著负相关,与水流速度呈显著正相关。在对经过时间和初始幼虫丰度的变化进行校正后,水流和捕食者解释了幼虫丰度变化率中38%的变异。幼虫丰度与水流之间的正相关有两个组成部分:水流对幼虫的直接正向影响,这是因为这些受食物限制的消费者更喜欢栖息在水流较快的区域,在那里它们能够以更高的速率进食;以及水流对捕食者的负面影响,以及捕食者对幼虫的负面影响,二者共同产生了水流对幼虫的间接正向影响。这种间接影响证明了水流介导的避难所的存在(即由于高水流而使捕食影响降低的微生境),尽管该影响在幼虫丰度的总变异中占比很小。对生物力学关系的考量表明,高水流的微生境很可能在广泛的淡水和海洋底栖环境中形成猎物避难所。特别是,捕食者由于体型较大且在床面上方突出得更远(此处水流速度更快),往往会比猎物经历更大的脱离力。此外,许多猎物,尤其是那些固着或半固着的猎物,抵抗给定脱离力的能力可能更强。