Munsterman Katrina S, Hesselbarth Maximilian H K, Allgeier Jacob E
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Biodiversity, Ecology, & Conservation Group, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Laxenburg, Austria.
Ecol Appl. 2025 Jan;35(1):e3055. doi: 10.1002/eap.3055. Epub 2024 Nov 22.
Effective management of wild animals requires understanding how predation and harvest alter the composition of populations. These top-down processes can alter consumer body size and behavior and thus should also have consequences for bottom-up processes because (1) body size is a critical determinant of the amount of nutrients excreted and (2) variation in foraging behavior, which is strongly influenced by predation, can determine the amount and spatial distribution of nutrients. Changes to either are known to affect ecosystem-scale nutrient dynamics, but the consequences of these dynamics on ecosystem processes are poorly understood. We used an individual-based model of an artificial reef (AR) and reef fish in a subtropical seagrass bed to test how fish body size can interact with variation in foraging behavior at the population and individual levels to affect seagrass production in a nutrient-limited system. Seagrass production dynamics can be driven by both belowground (BGPP) and aboveground primary production (AGPP); thus, we quantified ecosystem-scale production via these different mechanistic pathways. We found that (1) populations of small fish generated greater total primary production (TLPP = BGPP + AGPP) than large fish, (2) fish that foraged more increased TLPP more than those that spent time sheltering on ARs, and (3) small fish that foraged more led to greatest increases in TLPP. The mechanism by which this occurred was primarily through increased BGPP, highlighting the importance of cryptic belowground dynamics in seagrass ecosystems. Populations of extremely bold individuals (i.e., foraged significantly more) slightly increased TLPP but strongly affected the distribution of production, whereby bold individuals increased BGPP, while populations of shy individuals increased AGPP. Taken together, these results provide a link between consumer body size, variation in consumer behavior, and primary production-which, in turn, will support secondary production for fisheries. Our study suggests that human-induced changes-such as fishing-that alter consumer body size and behavior will fundamentally change ecosystem-scale production dynamics. Understanding the ecosystem effects of harvest on consumer populations is critical for ecosystem-based management, including the development of ARs for fisheries.
有效管理野生动物需要了解捕食和捕捞如何改变种群组成。这些自上而下的过程会改变消费者的体型和行为,因此也应该对自下而上的过程产生影响,原因如下:(1)体型是排泄养分数量的关键决定因素;(2)觅食行为的变化在很大程度上受捕食影响,它能决定养分的数量和空间分布。已知这两者的变化都会影响生态系统尺度的养分动态,但这些动态对生态系统过程的影响却知之甚少。我们使用了一个基于个体的亚热带海草草床人工鱼礁(AR)和礁鱼模型,来测试鱼类体型如何在种群和个体层面与觅食行为的变化相互作用,从而影响养分受限系统中的海草产量。海草产量动态可由地下(BGPP)和地上初级生产(AGPP)驱动;因此,我们通过这些不同的机制途径量化了生态系统尺度的产量。我们发现:(1)小鱼种群产生的总初级产量(TLPP = BGPP + AGPP)比大鱼种群更多;(2)觅食更多的鱼比那些在人工鱼礁上躲避的鱼使TLPP增加得更多;(3)觅食更多的小鱼导致TLPP增加最多。这种情况发生的机制主要是通过增加BGPP,突出了海草生态系统中隐秘的地下动态的重要性。极度大胆的个体(即觅食显著更多)种群使TLPP略有增加,但强烈影响了产量分布,大胆个体增加了BGPP,而害羞个体种群增加了AGPP。综上所述,这些结果建立了消费者体型、消费者行为变化与初级生产之间的联系,而这反过来又将支持渔业的次级生产。我们的研究表明,诸如捕捞等人为引起的改变消费者体型和行为的变化,将从根本上改变生态系统尺度的产量动态。了解捕捞对消费者种群的生态系统影响对于基于生态系统的管理至关重要,包括为渔业开发人工鱼礁。