4.5 Article

Variability effects by consumers exceed their average effects across an environmental gradient of mussel recruitment

期刊

OECOLOGIA
卷 196, 期 2, 页码 539-552

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-021-04951-6

关键词

Carcinus maenas; Dogwhelks; Green crab; Nucella lapillus; Mytilus edulis; Predation; Rocky intertidal

类别

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [DEB-1020480, DEB-1555641]
  2. CSUN Office of Research
  3. CSUN Graduate Equity Fellowships
  4. PADI Foundation
  5. Burnand-Partridge Foundation
  6. Addison E. Verrill Darling Marine Center (U. Maine) Visiting Graduate Fellowship

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that predation can reduce spatial variability in community structure, and as environmental changes accelerate, the variability effects of ecological processes and responses are likely to become increasingly important determinants of community dynamics.
The implicit assumption that properties of natural systems deduced from the average statistics from random samples suffice for understanding them focuses the attention of ecologists on the average effects of processes and responses, and often, to view their variability as noise. Yet, both kinds of effects can drive dynamics of ecological systems and their covariation may confound interpretation. Predation by crabs and snails on competitively dominant mussels has long been recognized as an important process structuring communities on rocky shores of the Northwest Atlantic Ocean. We experimentally manipulated the average intensity of predation in plots across a gradient of mussel recruitment to separately estimate the average and variability of responses of mussel recruitment and community composition. Predation did not affect the average number of mussels recruited to plots, nor the average multivariate composition of the community. Plots from which predators were excluded showed a -30% increase in spatial variability of mussel recruitment. After 1 year, the spatial variability in community composition was greater than that observed among plots that predators could access. An important, but less recognized, aspect of predation is its dampening effect on variability of community structure. As accelerating rates of environmental change disrupt species interactions, variability effects of ecological processes and corresponding responses are likely to be increasingly important determinants of community dynamics.

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