Department of Biology, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, Edgewater, MD, USA.
J Anim Ecol. 2020 Feb;89(2):323-333. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13133. Epub 2019 Dec 4.
The hypothesis that biotic interactions are stronger at lower relative to higher latitudes has a rich history, drawing from ecological and evolutionary theory. While this hypothesis suggests that stronger interactions at lower latitudes may contribute to the maintenance of contemporary patterns of diversity, there remain few standardized biogeographic comparisons of community effects of species interactions. Using marine seagrasses as a focal ecosystem of conservation importance and sessile marine invertebrates as model prey, we tested the hypothesis that predation is stronger at lower latitudes and can shape contemporary patterns of prey diversity. To further advance understanding beyond prior studies, we also explored mechanisms that likely underlie a change in interaction outcomes with latitude. Multiple observational and experimental approaches were employed to test for effects of predators, and the mechanisms that may underlie these effects, in seagrass ecosystems of the western Atlantic Ocean spanning 30° of latitude from the temperate zone to the tropics. In predator exclusion experiments conducted in a temperate and a tropical region, predation decreased sessile invertebrate abundance, richness and diversity on both natural and standardized artificial seagrass at tropical but not temperate sites. Further, predation reduced invertebrate richness at both local and regional scales in the tropics. Additional experiments demonstrated that predation reduced invertebrate recruitment in the tropics but not the temperate zone. Finally, direct observations of predators showed higher but variable consumption rates on invertebrates at tropical relative to temperate latitudes. Together, these results demonstrate that strong predation in the tropics can have consequential impacts on prey communities through discrete effects on early life stages as well as longer-term cumulative effects on community structure and diversity. Our detailed experiments also provide some of the first data linking large-scale biogeographic patterns, community-scale interaction outcomes and direct observation of predators in the temperate zone and tropics. Therefore, our results support the hypothesis that predation is stronger in the tropics, but also elucidate some of the causes and consequences of this variation in shaping contemporary patterns of diversity.
该假设认为,生物相互作用在较低的相对较高的纬度更强,有着丰富的历史,从生态和进化理论中汲取。虽然这一假设表明,在较低的纬度更强的相互作用可能有助于维持当代多样性模式,但仍有很少的标准化生物地理群落相互作用对物种的影响进行比较。利用海洋海草作为一个焦点生态系统的保护重要性和固着海洋无脊椎动物为模型猎物,我们测试了捕食在较低的纬度更强的假说,并可以塑造当代模式的猎物多样性。为了进一步超越之前的研究理解,我们还探索了可能在相互作用结果随纬度变化的机制。采用多种观测和实验方法来检验捕食者的影响,以及可能是这些影响的机制,在大西洋西部的海草生态系统跨越 30°的纬度从温带到热带。在进行的捕食者排除实验中在一个温带和一个热带地区,捕食减少了无脊椎动物在自然和标准化的人工海草上的丰度、丰富度和多样性,在热带而不是温带地区。此外,在热带地区,捕食减少了无脊椎动物在本地和区域尺度上的丰富度。进一步的实验表明,在热带地区捕食减少了无脊椎动物的补充,但在温带地区则没有。最后,对捕食者的直接观察表明,在热带地区捕食者对无脊椎动物的消耗率更高,但变化更大。总的来说,这些结果表明,在热带地区强烈的捕食作用可以通过对早期生命阶段的离散影响以及对群落结构和多样性的长期累积影响,对猎物群落产生重大影响。我们的详细实验还提供了一些首批数据,将大尺度生物地理格局、群落尺度相互作用结果以及温带和热带地区的捕食者直接观察联系起来。因此,我们的研究结果支持捕食作用在热带地区更强的假说,但也阐明了这种变化在塑造当代多样性模式中的一些原因和后果。