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海洋关键捕食者的恢复改变了陆地捕食者-猎物的动态。

Recovery of a marine keystone predator transforms terrestrial predator-prey dynamics.

机构信息

Division of Wildlife Conservation, Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Douglas, AK 99824.

Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Sciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331.

出版信息

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2023 Jan 31;120(5):e2209037120. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2209037120. Epub 2023 Jan 23.

Abstract

Sea otters () and wolves () are two apex predators with strong and cascading effects on ecosystem structure and function. After decades of recovery from near extirpation, their ranges now overlap, allowing sea otters and wolves to interact for the first time in the scientific record. We intensively studied wolves during 2015 to 2021 in an island system colonized by sea otters in the 2000s and by wolves in 2013. After wolf colonization, we quantified shifts in foraging behavior with DNA metabarcoding of 689 wolf scats and stable isotope analyses, both revealing a dietary switch from Sitka black-tailed deer (), the terrestrial in situ primary prey, to sea otters. Here we show an unexpected result of the reintroduction and restoration of sea otters, which became an abundant marine subsidy for wolves following population recovery. The availability of sea otters allowed wolves to persist and continue to reproduce, subsequently nearly eliminating deer. Genotypes from 390 wolf scats and telemetry data from 13 wolves confirmed island fidelity constituting one of the highest known wolf population densities and upending standardly accepted wolf density predictions based on ungulate abundance. Whereas marine subsidies in other systems are generally derived from lower trophic levels, here an apex nearshore predator became a key prey species and linked nearshore and terrestrial food webs in a recently deglaciated and rapidly changing ecosystem. These results underscore that species restoration may serve as an unanticipated nutrient pathway for recipient ecosystems even resulting in cross-boundary subsidy cascades.

摘要

海獭()和狼()是两种顶级掠食者,对生态系统结构和功能具有强大且级联的影响。经过近灭绝的几十年恢复后,它们的范围现在重叠,使得海獭和狼首次在科学记录中相互作用。我们在 2015 年至 2021 年期间在一个岛屿系统中对狼进行了深入研究,该系统在 21 世纪 00 年代被海獭殖民化,并于 2013 年被狼殖民化。在狼殖民化之后,我们通过对 689 个狼粪便的 DNA 宏条形码和稳定同位素分析,量化了觅食行为的转变,这两种方法都揭示了从 Sitka 黑尾鹿(),即原位主要陆地猎物,到海獭的饮食转变。在这里,我们展示了海獭重新引入和恢复的一个意外结果,即在种群恢复后,海獭成为了狼的丰富海洋补贴。海獭的可用性使狼得以生存并继续繁殖,随后几乎消灭了鹿。390 个狼粪便的基因型和 13 只狼的遥测数据证实了岛屿忠诚度,这构成了已知的最高狼种群密度之一,并推翻了基于有蹄类动物丰度的标准狼密度预测。虽然其他系统中的海洋补贴通常来自较低的营养级,但在这里,一种顶级近岸捕食者成为了关键的猎物物种,并在一个最近去冰化和快速变化的生态系统中连接了近岸和陆地食物网。这些结果表明,物种恢复可能成为受纳生态系统意想不到的营养途径,甚至导致跨界补贴级联。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/54bf/9945949/9b07726b7556/pnas.2209037120fig01.jpg

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