4.7 Article

Joint effects of patch edges and habitat degradation on faunal predation risk in a widespread marine foundation species

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 102, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3316

Keywords

edge effects; habitat structure; patch; predation; seagrass; seascape ecology; structural complexity; Zostera marina

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [NSF-OCE 1336206, OCE 1336905, OCE 1336741]
  2. Abo Akademi University Foundation

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The study found that, contrary to the common belief, predation risk for tethered crustaceans were lower along patch edges than in patch interiors at most eelgrass sites, regardless of habitat degradation. The extent to which edges reduced predation risk was correlated with higher eelgrass structural complexity and prey biomass at edges, suggesting an indirect component to edge effects.
Human activities degrade and fragment coastal marine habitats, reducing their structural complexity and making habitat edges a prevalent seascape feature. Though habitat edges frequently are implicated in reduced faunal survival and biodiversity, results of experiments on edge effects have been inconsistent, calling for a mechanistic approach to the study of edges that explicitly includes indirect and interactive effects of habitat alteration at multiple scales across biogeographic gradients. We used an experimental network spanning 17 eelgrass (Zostera marina) sites across the Atlantic and Pacific oceans and the Mediterranean Sea to determine (1) if eelgrass edges consistently increase faunal predation risk, (2) whether edge effects on predation risk are altered by habitat degradation (shoot thinning), and (3) whether variation in the strength of edge effects among sites can be explained by biogeographical variability in covarying eelgrass habitat features. Contrary to expectations, at most sites, predation risk for tethered crustaceans (crabs or shrimps) was lower along patch edges than in patch interiors, regardless of the extent of habitat degradation. However, the extent to which edges reduced predation risk, compared to the patch interior, was correlated with the extent to which edges supported higher eelgrass structural complexity and prey biomass compared to patch interiors. This suggests an indirect component to edge effects in which the impact of edge proximity on predation risk is mediated by the effect of edges on other key biotic factors. Our results suggest that studies on edge effects should consider structural characteristics of patch edges, which may vary geographically, and multiple ways that humans degrade habitats.

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