Department of Entomology, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, United States of America.
School of Forest Resources and Environmental Science, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, Michigan, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Sep 24;13(9):e0202869. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0202869. eCollection 2018.
Worldwide, native species increasingly contend with the interacting stressors of habitat fragmentation and invasive species, yet their combined effects have rarely been examined. Direct negative effects of invasive omnivores are well documented, but the indirect effects of resource competition or those caused by predator avoidance are unknown. Here we isolated and examined the independent and interactive effects of invasive omnivorous Black rats (Rattus rattus) and forest fragment size on the interactions between avian predators and their arthropod prey. Our study examines whether invasive omnivores and ecosystem fragment size impact: 1) the vertical distribution of arthropod species composition and abundance, and 2) the vertical profile of foraging behaviors of five native and two non-native bird species found in our study system. We predicted that the reduced edge effects and greater structural complexity and canopy height of larger fragments would limit the total and proportional habitat space frequented by rats and thus limit their impact on both arthropod biomass and birds' foraging behavior. We experimentally removed invasive omnivorous Black rats across a 100-fold (0.1 to 12 ha) size gradient of forest fragments on Hawai'i Island, and paired foraging observations of forest passerines with arthropod sampling in the 16 rat-removed and 18 control fragments. Rat removal was associated with shifts in the vertical distribution of arthropod biomass, irrespective of fragment size. Bird foraging behavior mirrored this shift, and the impact of rat removal was greater for birds that primarily eat fruit and insects compared with those that consume nectar. Evidence from this model study system indicates that invasive rats indirectly alter the feeding behavior of native birds, and consequently impact multiple trophic levels. This study suggests that native species can modify their foraging behavior in response to invasive species removal and presumably arrival through behavioral plasticity.
在全球范围内,本地物种越来越多地面临栖息地破碎化和入侵物种的相互胁迫,但它们的综合影响很少被研究。入侵杂食动物的直接负面影响已有充分记录,但资源竞争或避免捕食者造成的间接影响尚不清楚。在这里,我们分离并研究了入侵杂食性黑鼠(Rattus rattus)和森林片段大小对鸟类捕食者与其节肢动物猎物之间相互作用的独立和交互影响。我们的研究考察了入侵杂食动物和生态系统片段大小是否会影响:1)节肢动物物种组成和丰度的垂直分布,以及 2)五种本地和两种非本地鸟类在我们的研究系统中发现的垂直觅食行为的垂直分布。我们预测,较小的边缘效应、更大的结构复杂性和冠层高度会限制老鼠总栖息地和比例栖息地空间的频率,从而限制它们对节肢动物生物量和鸟类觅食行为的影响。我们在夏威夷岛上的森林片段大小(0.1 至 12 公顷)范围内进行了 100 倍的实验性移除入侵杂食性黑鼠,并对森林雀形目鸟类的觅食行为进行了配对观察,并在 16 个灭鼠和 18 个对照片段中进行了节肢动物采样。无论片段大小如何,灭鼠都会导致节肢动物生物量的垂直分布发生变化。鸟类觅食行为反映了这种变化,与主要以水果和昆虫为食的鸟类相比,以花蜜为食的鸟类受到灭鼠的影响更大。来自这个模型研究系统的证据表明,入侵老鼠间接改变了本地鸟类的觅食行为,从而影响了多个营养水平。这项研究表明,本地物种可以通过行为可塑性来改变它们的觅食行为,以应对入侵物种的移除和可能的入侵。