Hanmer John, White J Wilson, Pawlik Joseph R
Department of Biology and Marine Biology, Center for Marine Science, University of North Carolina Wilmington, 601 S. College Road, Wilmington, NC, 28401, USA.
Oecologia. 2017 May;184(1):127-137. doi: 10.1007/s00442-017-3855-y. Epub 2017 Mar 23.
Dietary preferences of grazers can drive spatial variability in top-down control of autotroph communities, because diet composition may depend on the relative availability of autotroph species. On Caribbean coral reefs, parrotfish grazing is important in limiting macroalgae, but parrotfish dietary preferences are poorly understood. We applied diet-switching analysis to quantify the foraging preferences of the redband parrotfish (Sparisoma aurofrenatum). At 12 Caribbean reefs, we observed 293 redband parrotfish in 5-min feeding bouts and quantified relative benthic algal cover using quadrats. The primary diet items were macroalgal turfs, Halimeda spp., and foliose macroalgae (primarily Dictyota spp. and Lobophora spp.). When each resource was evaluated independently, there were only weak relationships between resource cover and foraging effort (number of bites taken). Electivity for each resource also showed no pattern, varying from positive (preference for the resource) to negative (avoidance) across sites. However, a diet-switching analysis consisting of pairwise comparisons of relative cover and relative foraging effort revealed clearer patterns: parrotfish (a) preferred Halimeda and macroalgal turfs equally, and those two resources were highly substitutable; (b) preferred Halimeda to foliose macroalgae, but those two resources were complementary; and (c) also preferred turf to foliose macroalgae, and those resources were also complementary. Thus parrotfish grazing rates depend on relative, not absolute, abundance of macroalgal types, due to differences in substitutability among resources. Application of similar analyses may help predict potential changes in foraging effort of benthic grazers over spatial gradients that could inform expectations for reef recovery following the protection of herbivore populations.
食草动物的饮食偏好会导致自养生物群落自上而下控制的空间变异性,因为饮食组成可能取决于自养生物物种的相对可利用性。在加勒比珊瑚礁上,鹦嘴鱼的啃食对于限制大型藻类很重要,但人们对鹦嘴鱼的饮食偏好了解甚少。我们应用饮食转换分析来量化红斑鹦嘴鱼(Sparisoma aurofrenatum)的觅食偏好。在12个加勒比珊瑚礁上,我们在5分钟的摄食时段内观察了293条红斑鹦嘴鱼,并用样方对底栖藻类的相对覆盖率进行了量化。主要的食物种类是大型藻类草皮、仙掌藻属和叶状大型藻类(主要是网地藻属和石叶藻属)。当分别评估每种资源时,资源覆盖率与觅食努力(咬食次数)之间只有微弱的关系。对每种资源的选择性也没有规律,在不同地点从正向(对该资源的偏好)到负向(回避)变化。然而,由相对覆盖率和相对觅食努力的成对比较组成的饮食转换分析揭示了更清晰的模式:鹦嘴鱼(a)同样偏好仙掌藻和大型藻类草皮,这两种资源具有高度可替代性;(b)相较于叶状大型藻类,更偏好仙掌藻,但这两种资源是互补的;(c)相较于叶状大型藻类,也更偏好草皮,且这些资源也是互补的。因此,由于资源之间可替代性的差异,鹦嘴鱼的啃食率取决于大型藻类类型的相对丰度,而非绝对丰度。应用类似的分析可能有助于预测底栖食草动物在空间梯度上觅食努力的潜在变化,这可以为草食动物种群受到保护后珊瑚礁恢复的预期提供参考。