School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University, 370 Prospect Street, New Haven, Connecticut, 06511, USA.
Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, California, 94720, USA.
Ecology. 2017 Sep;98(9):2281-2292. doi: 10.1002/ecy.1916. Epub 2017 Aug 4.
Community ecology was traditionally an integrative science devoted to studying interactions between species and their abiotic environments in order to predict species' geographic distributions and abundances. Yet for philosophical and methodological reasons, it has become divided into two enterprises: one devoted to local experimentation on species interactions to predict community dynamics; the other devoted to statistical analyses of abiotic and biotic information to describe geographic distribution. Our goal here is to instigate thinking about ways to reconnect the two enterprises and thereby return to a tradition to do integrative science. We focus specifically on the community ecology of predators and prey, which is ripe for integration. This is because there is active, simultaneous interest in experimentally resolving the nature and strength of predator-prey interactions as well as explaining patterns across landscapes and seascapes. We begin by describing a conceptual theory rooted in classical analyses of non-spatial food web modules used to predict species interactions. We show how such modules can be extended to consideration of spatial context using the concept of habitat domain. Habitat domain describes the spatial extent of habitat space that predators and prey use while foraging, which differs from home range, the spatial extent used by an animal to meet all of its daily needs. This conceptual theory can be used to predict how different spatial relations of predators and prey could lead to different emergent multiple predator-prey interactions such as whether predator consumptive or non-consumptive effects should dominate, and whether intraguild predation, predator interference or predator complementarity are expected. We then review the literature on studies of large predator-prey interactions that make conclusions about the nature of multiple predator-prey interactions. This analysis reveals that while many studies provide sufficient information about predator or prey spatial locations, and thus meet necessary conditions of the habitat domain conceptual theory for drawing conclusions about the nature of the predator-prey interactions, several studies do not. We therefore elaborate how modern technology and statistical approaches for animal movement analysis could be used to test the conceptual theory, using experimental or quasi-experimental analyses at landscape scales.
社区生态学传统上是一门综合性科学,致力于研究物种与其非生物环境之间的相互作用,以便预测物种的地理分布和丰度。然而,由于哲学和方法论的原因,它已经分为两个企业:一个致力于物种相互作用的本地实验,以预测群落动态;另一个致力于对生物和非生物信息的统计分析,以描述地理分布。我们的目标是激发思考如何重新连接这两个企业,从而回归到进行综合性科学的传统。我们特别关注捕食者和猎物的社区生态学,这是一个成熟的整合领域。这是因为人们同时对实验解决捕食者-猎物相互作用的性质和强度以及解释跨景观和海域模式有着浓厚的兴趣。我们首先描述了一个基于经典的非空间食物网模块分析的概念理论,这些模块用于预测物种相互作用。我们展示了如何使用栖息地域的概念将这些模块扩展到对空间背景的考虑。栖息地域描述了捕食者和猎物在觅食时使用的栖息地空间的空间范围,这与动物用来满足其所有日常需求的空间范围不同。这个概念理论可以用来预测捕食者和猎物的不同空间关系如何导致不同的新兴多捕食者-猎物相互作用,例如捕食者的消耗或非消耗效应是否应该占主导地位,以及是否会发生种内捕食、捕食者干扰或捕食者互补。然后,我们回顾了关于大型捕食者-猎物相互作用的研究文献,这些文献对多捕食者-猎物相互作用的性质做出了结论。这一分析表明,虽然许多研究提供了关于捕食者或猎物空间位置的足够信息,从而满足了栖息地域概念理论得出关于捕食者-猎物相互作用性质的结论的必要条件,但也有一些研究没有提供这些信息。因此,我们详细说明了如何使用现代技术和动物运动分析的统计方法,通过在景观尺度上进行实验或准实验分析,来测试这一概念理论。