4.8 Article

Behavioral responses across a mosaic of ecosystem states restructure a sea otter-urchin trophic cascade

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2012493118

关键词

community regulation; ecosystem functioning; trophic cascade; stability; species interactions

资金

  1. NSF [OCE-1538582]
  2. NSF Graduate Research Internship Program
  3. Future Leaders in Coastal Science Award at the University of California Santa Cruz
  4. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship

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Consumer and predator foraging behavior can have significant impacts on community regulation, influencing ecosystem structure and stability. The response of apex predators to changes in prey behavior can alter the role of top-down forcing, depending on the spatial organization of ecosystem states. In this study, a shift in prey behavior and condition led to changes in predator-prey dynamics, highlighting the importance of trait-mediated responses in shaping ecosystem stability.
Consumer and predator foraging behavior can impart profound trait-mediated constraints on community regulation that scale up to influence the structure and stability of ecosystems. Here, we demonstrate how the behavioral response of an apex predator to changes in prey behavior and condition can dramatically alter the role and relative contribution of top-down forcing, depending on the spatial organization of ecosystem states. In 2014, a rapid and dramatic decline in the abundance of a mesopredator (Pycnopodia helianthoides) and primary producer (Macrocystis pyrifera) coincided with a fundamental change in purple sea urchin (Strongylocentrotus purpuratus) foraging behavior and condition, resulting in a spatial mosaic of kelp forests interspersed with patches of sea urchin barrens. We show that this mosaic of adjacent alternative ecosystem states led to an increase in the number of sea otters (Enhydra lutris nereis) specializing on urchin prey, a population level increase in urchin consumption, and an increase in sea otter survivorship. We further show that the spatial distribution of sea otter foraging efforts for urchin prey was not directly linked to high prey density but rather was predicted by the distribution of energetically profitable prey. Therefore, we infer that spatially explicit sea otter foraging enhances the resistance of remnant forests to overgrazing but does not directly contribute to the resilience (recovery) of forests. These results highlight the role of consumer and predator trait-mediated responses to resource mosaics that are common throughout natural ecosystems and enhance understanding of reciprocal feedbacks between top-down and bottomup forcing on the regional stability of ecosystems.

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