Center for Natural and Human Sciences, Federal University of ABC (CCNH/UFABC), Rua Santa Adélia, 166, Santo André, SP, 09210-170, Brazil.
Institute of Marine Science, Federal University of São Paulo (IMar/UNIFESP), Rua Dr Carvalho de Mendonça 144, Santos, SP, 11070-100, Brazil.
Oecologia. 2022 Jul;199(3):685-698. doi: 10.1007/s00442-022-05220-w. Epub 2022 Jul 20.
Predator-prey interactions are a key ecological process which can be modified by environmental conditions over a range of spatial scales. Through two complementary short-term experiments, we assessed how local and large-scale environmental conditions affect a subtropical intertidal predator-prey interaction. At a local scale, we evaluated the effects of the degree of exposure to wave action and prey density on consumption rate and interaction strength using a whelk-barnacle system. Consumption rate decreased with wave exposure at experimentally reduced prey density but did not change at ambient density. Such an interactive effect occurred due to shifts in the whelk's feeding behaviour, likely linked to encounter rate and stress amelioration underpinned by prey density. Per capita interaction strength of the whelk on the barnacle weakened along the wave exposure gradient, but to a greater degree at reduced compared to ambient prey density. This confirms that environmental harshness can decrease the importance of predators, but the magnitude of change may be modified by density-dependent effects. A large-scale experiment did not reveal spatial patterns in the whelk-barnacle interaction, nor relationships to chlorophyll-a concentration or the minor change in sea temperature across the study area. Patterns in the size of consumed barnacles along the chlorophyll-a gradient suggest changes in food choice related to prey quality and size. We conclude that disentangling the effects of wave exposure and prey density revealed important potential mechanisms driving species locally. Large-scale variation in the whelk-barnacle interaction appeared to be linked to species' traits shaped by the environmental context.
捕食者-猎物相互作用是一种关键的生态过程,可以通过一系列空间尺度的环境条件来改变。通过两个互补的短期实验,我们评估了局部和大尺度环境条件如何影响亚热带潮间带捕食者-猎物相互作用。在局部尺度上,我们使用石鳖-藤壶系统评估了暴露于波浪作用和猎物密度对摄食率和相互作用强度的影响程度。在实验降低的猎物密度下,摄食率随波浪暴露而降低,但在环境密度下没有变化。这种相互作用的发生是由于石鳖的摄食行为发生了变化,可能与猎物密度支撑的遭遇率和应激缓解有关。在波暴露梯度上,石鳖对藤壶的个体间相互作用强度减弱,但在降低的猎物密度下比在环境密度下的减弱程度更大。这证实了环境恶劣程度可以降低捕食者的重要性,但变化的幅度可能会受到密度依赖效应的影响。大型实验并未揭示石鳖-藤壶相互作用的空间模式,也未揭示与叶绿素-a 浓度或研究区域内海水温度的微小变化之间的关系。沿叶绿素-a 梯度消耗的藤壶大小的模式表明,与猎物质量和大小有关的食物选择发生了变化。我们得出的结论是,揭示波浪暴露和猎物密度的影响效应揭示了局部驱动物种的重要潜在机制。在石鳖-藤壶相互作用的大尺度变化似乎与由环境背景塑造的物种特征有关。