Schmitz Oswald
School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University, 370 Prospect Street, New Haven, CT, 06515, USA.
F1000Res. 2017 Sep 27;6:1767. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.11813.1. eCollection 2017.
Predator-prey relationships are a central component of community dynamics. Classic approaches have tried to understand and predict these relationships in terms of consumptive interactions between predator and prey species, but characterizing the interaction this way is insufficient to predict the complexity and context dependency inherent in predator-prey relationships. Recent approaches have begun to explore predator-prey relationships in terms of an evolutionary-ecological game in which predator and prey adapt to each other through reciprocal interactions involving context-dependent expression of functional traits that influence their biomechanics. Functional traits are defined as any morphological, behavioral, or physiological trait of an organism associated with a biotic interaction. Such traits include predator and prey body size, predator and prey personality, predator hunting mode, prey mobility, prey anti-predator behavior, and prey physiological stress. Here, I discuss recent advances in this functional trait approach. Evidence shows that the nature and strength of many interactions are dependent upon the relative magnitude of predator and prey functional traits. Moreover, trait responses can be triggered by non-consumptive predator-prey interactions elicited by responses of prey to risk of predation. These interactions in turn can have dynamic feedbacks that can change the context of the predator-prey interaction, causing predator and prey to adapt their traits-through phenotypically plastic or rapid evolutionary responses-and the nature of their interaction. Research shows that examining predator-prey interactions through the lens of an adaptive evolutionary-ecological game offers a foundation to explain variety in the nature and strength of predator-prey interactions observed in different ecological contexts.
捕食者与猎物的关系是群落动态的核心组成部分。经典方法试图从捕食者和猎物物种之间的消耗性相互作用来理解和预测这些关系,但以这种方式描述相互作用不足以预测捕食者与猎物关系中固有的复杂性和情境依赖性。最近的方法开始从进化生态博弈的角度探索捕食者与猎物的关系,在这种博弈中,捕食者和猎物通过涉及影响其生物力学的功能性状的情境依赖性表达的相互作用来相互适应。功能性状被定义为与生物相互作用相关的生物体的任何形态、行为或生理特征。这些特征包括捕食者和猎物的体型、捕食者和猎物的个性、捕食者的捕猎模式、猎物的移动性、猎物的反捕食行为以及猎物的生理压力。在此,我将讨论这种功能性状方法的最新进展。有证据表明,许多相互作用的性质和强度取决于捕食者和猎物功能性状的相对大小。此外,猎物对被捕食风险的反应引发的非消耗性捕食者与猎物相互作用可以触发性状反应。这些相互作用反过来可以产生动态反馈,从而改变捕食者与猎物相互作用的情境,导致捕食者和猎物通过表型可塑性或快速进化反应来调整其性状以及它们相互作用的性质。研究表明,通过适应性进化生态博弈的视角来研究捕食者与猎物的相互作用,为解释在不同生态背景下观察到的捕食者与猎物相互作用的性质和强度的多样性提供了一个基础。