Young Hillary S, McCauley Finn O, Micheli Fiorenza, Dunbar Robert B, McCauley Douglas J
Department of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology, UC Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA.
Independent Research.
Ecol Appl. 2024 Jul;34(5):e3002. doi: 10.1002/eap.3002. Epub 2024 Jun 5.
Direct exploitation through fishing is driving dramatic declines of wildlife populations in ocean environments, particularly for predatory and large-bodied taxa. Despite wide recognition of this pattern and well-established consequences of such trophic downgrading on ecosystem function, there have been few empirical studies examining the effects of fishing on whole system trophic architecture. Understanding these kinds of structural impacts is especially important in coral reef ecosystems-often heavily fished and facing multiple stressors. Given the often high dietary flexibility and numerous functional redundancies in diverse ecosystems such as coral reefs, it is important to establish whether web architecture is strongly impacted by fishing pressure or whether it might be resilient, at least to moderate-intensity pressure. To examine this question, we used a combination of bulk and compound-specific stable isotope analyses measured across a range of predatory and low-trophic-level consumers between two coral reef ecosystems that differed with respect to fishing pressure but otherwise remained largely similar. We found that even in a high-diversity system with relatively modest fishing pressure, there were strong reductions in the trophic position (TP) of the three highest TP consumers examined in the fished system but no effects on the TP of lower-level consumers. We saw no evidence that this shortening of the affected food webs was being driven by changes in basal resource consumption, for example, through changes in the spatial location of foraging by consumers. Instead, this likely reflected internal changes in food web architecture, suggesting that even in diverse systems and with relatively modest pressure, human harvest causes significant compressions in food chain length. This observed shortening of these food webs may have many important emergent ecological consequences for the functioning of ecosystems impacted by fishing or hunting. Such important structural shifts may be widespread but unnoticed by traditional surveys. This insight may also be useful for applied ecosystem managers grappling with choices about the relative importance of protection for remote and pristine areas and the value of strict no-take areas to protect not just the raw constituents of systems affected by fishing and hunting but also the health and functionality of whole systems.
通过捕鱼进行的直接开发正在导致海洋环境中野生动物数量急剧下降,尤其是对于掠食性和大体型的生物分类群而言。尽管这种模式已得到广泛认可,且这种营养级降低对生态系统功能的既定后果也广为人知,但很少有实证研究考察捕鱼对整个系统营养结构的影响。了解这类结构影响在珊瑚礁生态系统中尤为重要,因为珊瑚礁生态系统常常遭受过度捕捞且面临多种压力源。鉴于在诸如珊瑚礁等多样生态系统中,生物通常具有很高的饮食灵活性和众多功能冗余,确定食物网结构是否受到捕鱼压力的强烈影响,或者它是否具有恢复力,至少对中等强度的压力具有恢复力,这一点很重要。为了研究这个问题,我们结合了大量分析和化合物特异性稳定同位素分析,对两个在捕鱼压力方面存在差异但在其他方面基本相似的珊瑚礁生态系统中的一系列掠食性和低营养级消费者进行了测量。我们发现,即使在一个捕鱼压力相对较小的高多样性系统中,在捕鱼的系统中,所检测的三个营养级最高的消费者的营养级(TP)也大幅下降,而对低营养级消费者的TP没有影响。我们没有发现证据表明受影响食物网的这种缩短是由基础资源消耗的变化所驱动的,例如,消费者觅食空间位置的变化。相反,这可能反映了食物网结构的内部变化,这表明即使在多样的系统中且压力相对较小,人类捕捞也会导致食物链长度显著缩短。这些食物网的这种缩短可能对受捕鱼或捕猎影响的生态系统功能产生许多重要的、新出现的生态后果。这种重要的结构变化可能很普遍,但传统调查却未注意到。这一见解对于应用生态系统管理者也可能有用,他们正在努力权衡保护偏远和原始地区的相对重要性,以及严格的禁捕区对于保护不仅是受捕鱼和捕猎影响系统的原始组成部分,而且是整个系统的健康和功能的价值。