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女性体型对占优势的北极蜘蛛同类相食和幼体丰度的影响。

Impacts of female body size on cannibalism and juvenile abundance in a dominant arctic spider.

机构信息

Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA.

Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.

出版信息

J Anim Ecol. 2020 Aug;89(8):1788-1798. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13230. Epub 2020 May 4.

Abstract

Body size influences an individual's physiology and the nature of its intra- and interspecific interactions. Changes in this key functional trait can therefore have important implications for populations as well. For example, among invertebrates, there is typically a positive correlation between female body size and reproductive output. Increasing body size can consequently trigger changes in population density, population structure (e.g. adult to juvenile ratio) and the strength of intraspecific competition. Body size changes have been documented in several species in the Arctic, a region that is warming rapidly. In particular, wolf spiders, one of the most abundant arctic invertebrate predators, are becoming larger and therefore more fecund. Whether these changes are affecting their populations and role within food webs is currently unclear. We investigated the population structure and feeding ecology of the dominant wolf spider species Pardosa lapponica at two tundra sites where adult spiders naturally differ in mean body size. Additionally, we performed a mesocosm experiment to investigate how variation in wolf spider density, which is likely to change as a function of body size, influences feeding ecology and its sensitivity to warming. We found that juvenile abundance is negatively associated with female size and that wolf spiders occupied higher trophic positions where adult females were larger. Because female body size is positively related to fecundity in P. lapponica, the unexpected finding of fewer juveniles with larger females suggests an increase in density-dependent cannibalism as a result of increased intraspecific competition for resources. Higher rates of density-dependent cannibalism are further supported by the results from our mesocosm experiment, in which individuals occupied higher trophic positions in plots with higher wolf spider densities. We observed no changes in wolf spider feeding ecology in association with short-term experimental warming. Our results suggest that body size variation in wolf spiders is associated with variation in intraspecific competition, feeding ecology and population structure. Given the widespread distribution of wolf spiders in arctic ecosystems, body size shifts in these predators as a result of climate change could have implications for lower trophic levels and for ecosystem functioning.

摘要

体型会影响个体的生理机能及其种内和种间相互作用的性质。因此,这种关键功能特征的变化可能对种群也有重要影响。例如,在无脊椎动物中,雌性体型通常与生殖产出呈正相关。体型的增加会导致种群密度、种群结构(例如,成年与幼年的比例)和种内竞争强度的变化。在北极地区,有几个物种的体型发生了变化,该地区的气候正在迅速变暖。特别是狼蛛,作为最丰富的北极无脊椎捕食者之一,体型变得更大,因此繁殖力更强。这些变化是否正在影响它们的种群和在食物网中的作用目前还不清楚。我们研究了在两个苔原地点,体型较大的成年狼蛛自然存在差异的情况下,占主导地位的狼蛛种 Pardosa lapponica 的种群结构和食性生态学。此外,我们进行了一个中观实验,以研究狼蛛密度的变化如何影响食性生态学及其对变暖的敏感性,而狼蛛密度的变化可能是由于体型的变化而产生的。我们发现,幼年个体的丰度与雌性体型呈负相关,而狼蛛占据的营养位更高,成年雌性体型越大。由于 Pardosa lapponica 中的雌性体型与繁殖力呈正相关,因此体型较大的雌性个体中幼年个体数量较少的意外发现表明,由于资源的种内竞争加剧,密度依赖性同类相食的情况有所增加。中观实验的结果进一步支持了更高的密度依赖性同类相食的可能性,因为在狼蛛密度较高的实验小区中,个体占据了更高的营养位。我们没有观察到与短期实验变暖相关的狼蛛食性生态学的变化。我们的研究结果表明,狼蛛体型的变化与种内竞争、食性生态学和种群结构的变化有关。考虑到狼蛛在北极生态系统中的广泛分布,这些捕食者由于气候变化而导致的体型变化可能会对较低的营养水平和生态系统功能产生影响。

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