Kenny Heather V, Wright Amber N, Piovia-Scott Jonah, Yang Louie H, Spiller David A, Schoener Thomas W
Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Conservation Biology University of California Davis CA USA.
Department of Biology University of Hawai'i at Mānoa Honolulu HI USA.
Ecol Evol. 2017 Nov 7;7(24):10701-10709. doi: 10.1002/ece3.3560. eCollection 2017 Dec.
Resource pulses are brief periods of unusually high resource abundance. While population and community responses to resource pulses have been relatively well studied, how individual consumers respond to resource pulses has received less attention. Local consumers are often the first to respond to a resource pulse, and the form and timing of individual responses may influence how the effects of the pulse are transmitted throughout the community. Previous studies in Bahamian food webs have shown that detritivores associated with pulses of seaweed wrack provide an alternative prey source for lizards. When seaweed is abundant, lizards () shift to consuming more marine-derived prey and increase in density, which has important consequences for other components of the food web. We hypothesized that the diet shift requires individuals to alter their habitat use and foraging activity and that such responses may happen very rapidly. In this study, we used recorded video observations to investigate the immediate responses of lizards to an experimental seaweed pulse. We added seaweed to five treatment plots for comparison with five control plots. Immediately after seaweed addition, lizards decreased average perch height and increased movement rate, but these effects persisted for only 2 days. To explore the short-term nature of the response, we used our field data to parametrize heuristic Markov chain models of perch height as a function of foraging state. These models suggest a "Synchronized-satiation Hypothesis," whereby lizards respond synchronously and feed quickly to satiation in the presence of a subsidy (causing an initial decrease in average perch height) and then return to the relative safety of higher perches. We suggest that the immediate responses of individual consumers to resource pulse events can provide insight into the mechanisms by which these consumers ultimately influence community-level processes.
资源脉冲是资源异常丰富的短暂时期。虽然种群和群落对资源脉冲的反应已得到相对充分的研究,但个体消费者如何应对资源脉冲却较少受到关注。本地消费者往往是对资源脉冲最先做出反应的,个体反应的形式和时间可能会影响脉冲效应在整个群落中的传播方式。此前在巴哈马食物网的研究表明,与海藻残骸脉冲相关的碎屑食性动物为蜥蜴提供了另一种猎物来源。当海藻丰富时,蜥蜴会转而食用更多海洋来源的猎物,且密度增加,这对食物网的其他组成部分具有重要影响。我们推测,饮食转变要求个体改变其栖息地利用和觅食活动,而且这种反应可能会非常迅速地发生。在本研究中,我们使用录像观察来探究蜥蜴对实验性海藻脉冲的即时反应。我们在五个处理地块添加了海藻,以便与五个对照地块进行比较。添加海藻后,蜥蜴立即降低了平均栖息高度并提高了移动速度,但这些影响仅持续了两天。为了探究这种反应的短期性质,我们利用实地数据为栖息高度作为觅食状态函数的启发式马尔可夫链模型设定参数。这些模型提出了一个“同步饱足假说”,即蜥蜴在有补贴的情况下会同步做出反应并迅速进食至饱足(导致平均栖息高度最初下降),然后回到较高栖息处的相对安全位置。我们认为,个体消费者对资源脉冲事件的即时反应可以为这些消费者最终影响群落水平过程的机制提供见解。