Centre d'étude de la forêt, Département de biologie, Université Laval, Québec, QC G1V 0A6, Canada.
Department of Biology, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5E2, Canada.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2021 Jul 27;118(30). doi: 10.1073/pnas.2022892118.
While the important role of animal-mediated interactions in the top-down restructuring of plant communities is well documented, less is known of their ensuing repercussions at higher trophic levels. We demonstrate how typically decoupled ecological interactions may become intertwined such that the impact of an insect pest on forest structure and composition alters predator-prey interactions among large mammals. Specifically, we show how irruptions in a common, cyclic insect pest of the boreal forest, the spruce budworm (), modulated an indirect trophic interaction by initiating a flush in deciduous vegetation that benefited moose (), in turn strengthening apparent competition between moose and threatened boreal caribou () via wolf () predation. Critically, predation on caribou postoutbreak was exacerbated by human activity (salvage logging). We believe our observations of significant, large-scale reverberating consumer-producer-consumer interactions are likely to be common in nature.
虽然动物介导的相互作用在植物群落的自上而下的重构中起着重要作用,但它们对更高营养级的后续影响却知之甚少。我们展示了通常分离的生态相互作用如何交织在一起,以至于昆虫害虫对森林结构和组成的影响改变了大型哺乳动物之间的捕食者-猎物相互作用。具体来说,我们展示了北方森林中一种常见的、周期性的昆虫害虫——云杉卷叶蛾()的爆发是如何通过引发落叶植被的爆发,从而改变食草动物与受威胁的北方驯鹿()之间的间接营养相互作用的,而这种爆发又通过狼()捕食使驯鹿受益于驼鹿()。至关重要的是,人类活动(抢救性伐木)加剧了驯鹿爆发后的捕食。我们认为,我们观察到的重要的、大规模的、连锁的消费者-生产者-消费者相互作用在自然界中可能很常见。