4.7 Article

Consumptive and nonconsumptive effects of cannibalism in fluctuating age-structured populations

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 91, Issue 2, Pages 549-559

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/08-1366.1

Keywords

age structure; Ambystoma tigrinum nebulosum; cannibalism; consumptive and nonconsumptive effects; Mexican Cut Nature Preserve, Colorado, USA; population fluctuations; recruitment failure; tiger salamanders

Categories

Funding

  1. Fulbright Foundation
  2. FNRS [1.5.01 1.03, 1.5.120.04, F.4718.07, 1.5.199.07, 1.5.013.08]
  3. Murray State University
  4. National Science Foundation [DEB-0109436, DEB-0108931]

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Theory and empirical Studies suggest that cannibalism ill age-structured populations can regulate recruitment depending oil the intensity of intraspecific competition between cannibals and victims and the nature of the cannibalism window, i.e., which size classes interact as cannibals and victims. Here we report oil a series of experiments that quantify that window for age-structured Populations of salamander larvae and paedomorphic adults. We determined body size limits on cannibalism in microcosms and then the consumptive and nonconsumptive (injuries, foraging and activity, diet, growth) effects on victims in mesocosms with seminatural levels of habitat complexity and alternative prey. We found that cannibalism by the largest size classes (paedomorphs and >= age 3+ yr larvae) Occurs mainly on young-of-the-year (YOY) victims. Surviving YOY and other small larvae had increased injuries, reduced activity levels, and reduced growth rates in the presence of cannibals. Data on YOY survival in an experiment in which we manipulated the density of paedomorphs combined with historical data oil the number of cannibals ill natural populations indicate that dominant cohorts of paedomorphs can cause observed recruitment failures. Dietary data indicate that ontogenetic shifts ill diet should preclude strong intraspecific competition between YOY and cannibals in this species. Thus Our results are consistent with previous empirical and theoretical work that suggests that recruitment regulation by cannibalism is most likely when YOY are vulnerable to cannibalism but have low dietary overlap with cannibals. Understanding the role of cannibalism in regulating recruitment in salamander populations is timely, given the widespread occurrences of amphibian decline. Previous Studies have focused on extrinsic (including anthropogenic) factors that affect amphibian population dynamics, whereas the data presented here combined with long-term field observations suggest the potential for intrinsically driven population cycles.

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