Shears Nick T, Babcock Russell C
Leigh Marine Laboratory, University of Auckland, P.O. Box 349, Warkworth, New Zealand.
Oecologia. 2002 Jun;132(1):131-142. doi: 10.1007/s00442-002-0920-x. Epub 2002 Jun 1.
Replicated ecological studies in marine reserves and associated unprotected areas are valuable in examining top-down impacts on communities and the ecosystem-level effects of fishing. We carried out experimental studies in two temperate marine reserves to examine these top-down influences on shallow subtidal reef communities in northeastern New Zealand. Both reserves examined are known to support high densities of predators and tethering experiments showed that the chance of predation on the dominant sea urchin, Evechinus chloroticus, within both reserves was approximately 7 times higher relative to outside. Predation was most intense on the smallest size class (30-40 mm) of tethered urchins, the size at which urchins cease to exhibit cryptic behaviour. A high proportion of predation on large urchins could be attributed to the spiny lobster, Jasus edwardsii. Predation on the smaller classes was probably by both lobsters and predatory fish, predominantly the sparid Pagrus auratus. The density of adult Evechinus actively grazing the substratum in the urchin barrens habitat was found to be significantly lower at marine reserve sites (2.2±0.3 m) relative to non-reserve sites (5.5±0.4 m). There was no difference in the density of cryptic juveniles between reserve and non-reserve sites. Reserve populations were more bimodal, with urchins between 40 and 55 mm occurring at very low numbers. Experimental removal of Evechinus from the urchin barrens habitat over 12 months lead to a change from a crustose coralline algal habitat to a macroalgal dominated habitat. Such macroalgal habitats were found to be more extensive in both reserves, where urchin densities were lower, relative to the adjacent unprotected areas that were dominated by urchin barrens. The patterns observed provide evidence for a top-down role of predators in structuring shallow reef communities in northeastern New Zealand and demonstrate how marine reserves can reverse the indirect effects of fishing and re-establish community-level trophic cascades.
在海洋保护区及相关未受保护区域开展的重复性生态研究,对于检验自上而下对群落的影响以及捕捞对生态系统层面的影响具有重要价值。我们在两个温带海洋保护区开展了实验研究,以检验这些自上而下的影响对新西兰东北部浅海潮下带珊瑚礁群落的作用。已知这两个被研究的保护区都有高密度的捕食者,拴系实验表明,相对于保护区外,两个保护区内占主导地位的海胆——绿海胆(Evechinus chloroticus)被捕食的几率高出约7倍。对于拴系海胆中最小尺寸等级(30 - 40毫米)的捕食最为强烈,这个尺寸的海胆不再表现出隐匿行为。对大型海胆的高比例捕食可归因于刺龙虾(Jasus edwardsii)。对较小尺寸等级海胆的捕食可能是由龙虾和掠食性鱼类共同造成的,主要是鲷科的耳带笛鲷(Pagrus auratus)。发现在海胆荒芜栖息地积极啃食基质的成年绿海胆密度,在海洋保护区站点(2.2±0.3只/平方米)显著低于非保护区站点(5.5±0.4只/平方米)。保护区和非保护区站点隐匿的幼年海胆密度没有差异。保护区的海胆种群更具双峰分布特征,40至55毫米的海胆数量极少。在12个月内从海胆荒芜栖息地实验性移除绿海胆,导致栖息地从硬壳珊瑚藻栖息地转变为大型藻类主导的栖息地。相对于以海胆荒芜为主的相邻未受保护区域,这种大型藻类栖息地在两个保护区更为广泛,那里海胆密度较低。观察到的这些模式为捕食者在构建新西兰东北部浅海珊瑚礁群落中自上而下的作用提供了证据,并证明了海洋保护区如何能够扭转捕捞的间接影响并重新建立群落层面的营养级联。