Department of Integrative Biology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, 97331, USA.
Ecology. 2018 Apr;99(4):792-800. doi: 10.1002/ecy.2173. Epub 2018 Feb 28.
The importance of competition and predation in structuring ecological communities is typically examined separately such that interactions between these processes are seldom understood. By causing large reductions in native prey, invasive predators may modify native species interactions. I conducted a manipulative field experiment in The Bahamas to investigate the possibility that the invasive Pacific red lionfish (Pterois volitans) alters competition between planktivorous fairy and blackcap basslets (Gramma loreto and Gramma melacara, respectively). Competition between these coral-reef fishes is known to have symmetrical effects on the juveniles of both species, whereby the feeding positions under reef ledges and growth rates of these individuals are hindered. Following baseline censuses of local populations of competing basslets, I simultaneously manipulated the abundance of lionfish on entire reefs, and the abundance of basslets in local populations under isolated ledges within each reef, resulting in three treatments: unmanipulated control populations of both basslets, reduced abundance of fairy basslet, and reduced abundance of blackcap basslet. For eight weeks, I measured the change in biomass and feeding position of 2-5 cm size classes of each basslet species and calculated the growth rates of ~2 cm individuals using a standard mark-and-recapture method. Experimental populations were filmed at dusk using automated video cameras to quantify the behavior of lionfish overlapping with basslets. Video playback revealed lionfish hunted across all ledge positions, regardless of which basslet species were present, yet lionfish differentially reduced the biomass of only juvenile (2 cm) fairy basslet. Predation reduced the effects of interspecific competition on juvenile blackcap basslet as evidenced by corresponding shifts in feeding position toward coveted front edges of ledges and increases in growth rates that were comparable to the response of these fish in populations where competition was experimentally reduced. Thus, an invasive marine predator altered the outcome of interspecific competition via differential predation, which tipped the balance of competition between native prey species from symmetrical to asymmetrical effects on juveniles. This study reveals a newly demonstrated context in which predation can indirectly facilitate prey, further broadening our understanding of the interactive effects of predation and competition in the context of invasive species.
竞争和捕食在构建生态群落中的重要性通常是分开研究的,因此很少理解这两个过程之间的相互作用。入侵性的太平洋红狮子鱼(Pterois volitans)大量减少了本地猎物,可能会改变本地物种的相互作用。我在巴哈马群岛进行了一项操纵性野外实验,以调查入侵的太平洋红狮子鱼是否会改变食浮游生物的神仙鱼和黑鳍真鲷(分别为Gramma loreto 和 Gramma melacara)之间的竞争。这两种珊瑚礁鱼类之间的竞争已知对这两个物种的幼鱼有对称的影响,即这些个体在珊瑚礁壁架下的取食位置和生长速度受到阻碍。在对竞争的真鲷进行基线普查后,我同时操纵了整个珊瑚礁上狮子鱼的丰度,以及每个珊瑚礁内孤立壁架下的真鲷种群的丰度,结果产生了三种处理:两种真鲷的未受干扰的对照种群、减少神仙鱼的丰度和减少黑鳍真鲷的丰度。在八周的时间里,我测量了每个真鲷物种 2-5 厘米大小类别的生物量和取食位置的变化,并使用标准的标记和重捕法计算了~2 厘米个体的生长率。使用自动摄像机在黄昏时分对实验种群进行拍摄,以量化狮子鱼与真鲷重叠的行为。视频回放显示,狮子鱼在所有壁架位置上都捕食,无论存在哪种真鲷物种,但狮子鱼仅减少了幼鱼(2 厘米)神仙鱼的生物量。捕食减少了种间竞争对幼鱼黑鳍真鲷的影响,表现为向壁架前缘的取食位置的相应转移,以及生长率的增加,这些与这些鱼在竞争实验减少的种群中的反应相当。因此,一种入侵的海洋捕食者通过差异捕食改变了种间竞争的结果,使本地猎物物种之间的竞争从对幼鱼的对称影响转变为不对称影响。本研究揭示了一个新的证明,即捕食可以间接促进猎物,进一步拓宽了我们对捕食和竞争在入侵物种背景下的相互作用的理解。