Sellers Andrew J, Leung Brian, Altieri Andrew H, Glanz Jess, Turner Benjamin L, Torchin Mark E
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Panama City, Republic of Panama.
Department of Biology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, H3A 1B1, Canada.
Ecology. 2021 Jun;102(6):e03335. doi: 10.1002/ecy.3335. Epub 2021 Apr 18.
Communities are shaped by a variety of ecological and environmental processes, each acting at different spatial scales. Seminal research on rocky shores highlighted the effects of consumers as local determinants of primary productivity and community assembly. However, it is now clear that the species interactions shaping communities at local scales are themselves regulated by large-scale oceanographic processes that generate regional variation in resource availability. Upwelling events deliver nutrient-rich water to coastal ecosystems, influencing primary productivity and algae-herbivore interactions. Despite the potential for upwelling to alter top-down control by herbivores, we know relatively little about the coupling between oceanographic processes and herbivory on tropical rocky shores, where herbivore effects on producers are considered to be strong and nutrient levels are considered to be limiting. By replicating seasonal molluscan herbivore exclusion experiments across three regions exposed to varying intensity of seasonal upwelling, separated by hundreds of kilometers along Panama's Pacific coast, we examine large-scale environmental determinants of consumer effects and community structure on tropical rocky shores. At sites experiencing seasonal upwelling, grazers strongly limited macroalgal cover when upwelling was absent, leading to dominance by crustose algae. As nutrients increased and surface water cooled during upwelling events, increases in primary productivity temporarily weakened herbivory, allowing foliose, turf and filamentous algae to replace crusts. Meanwhile, grazer effects were persistently strong at sites without seasonal upwelling. Our results confirm that herbivores are key determinants of tropical algal cover, and that the mollusk grazing guild can control initial stages of macroalgal succession. However, our focus on regional oceanographic conditions revealed that bottom-up processes regulate top-down control on tropical shorelines. This study expands on the extensive body of work highlighting the influence of upwelling on local ecological processes by demonstrating that nutrient subsidies delivered by upwelling events can weaken herbivory in tropical rocky shores.
群落是由各种生态和环境过程塑造而成的,每个过程都在不同的空间尺度上起作用。对岩岸的开创性研究突出了消费者作为初级生产力和群落组装的局部决定因素的影响。然而,现在很清楚的是,在局部尺度上塑造群落的物种相互作用本身受到大规模海洋学过程的调节,这些过程导致资源可用性的区域差异。上升流事件将富含营养的水输送到沿海生态系统,影响初级生产力和藻类 - 食草动物的相互作用。尽管上升流有可能改变食草动物的自上而下的控制,但我们对热带岩岸上海洋学过程与食草作用之间的耦合了解相对较少,在热带岩岸,食草动物对生产者的影响被认为很强,而营养水平被认为是有限的。通过在巴拿马太平洋沿岸数百公里分隔的三个受不同强度季节性上升流影响的区域重复进行季节性软体动物食草动物排除实验,我们研究了热带岩岸上海洋学过程对消费者影响和群落结构的大规模环境决定因素。在经历季节性上升流的地点,当上升流不存在时,食草动物强烈限制大型藻类覆盖,导致壳状藻类占主导地位。随着上升流事件期间营养物质增加和地表水冷却,初级生产力的增加暂时削弱了食草作用,使叶状、草皮状和丝状藻类取代了壳状藻类。与此同时,在没有季节性上升流的地点,食草动物的影响一直很强。我们的结果证实,食草动物是热带藻类覆盖的关键决定因素,并且软体动物食草动物群落可以控制大型藻类演替的初始阶段。然而,我们对区域海洋学条件的关注表明,自下而上的过程调节了热带海岸线的自上而下的控制。这项研究通过证明上升流事件带来的营养补贴可以削弱热带岩岸的食草作用,扩展了大量强调上升流对局部生态过程影响的工作。