4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Shorebirds, snails, and the amphipod (Corophium volutator) in the upper Bay of Fundy:: top-down vs. bottom-up factors, and the influence of compensatory interactions on mudflat ecology

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HYDROBIOLOGIA
卷 567, 期 -, 页码 285-306

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10750-006-0062-y

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top-down and bottom-up effects; trophic cascades; compensatory interactions; intertidal mudflats; Calidris pusilla; Corophium volutator; Ilyanassa obsoleta; Bay of Fundy

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During their annual mid- to late-summer southward migration, Semipalmated Sandpipers (Calidris pusilla) feed intensively on the amphipod Corophium volutator on intertidal mudflats in the Bay of Fundy. Corophium, in turn, feed on diatoms and bacteria. Using a series of bird exclosures and fertilizer addition, we examined top-down and bottom-up effects, and investigated the presence of a trophic cascade in the mudflat community during the period when birds are abundant. Although both top-down and bottom-up forces were present in this system, neither transmitted beyond a single trophic link. Predation by shorebirds, which may be less size-selective than previously thought, reduced Corophium abundance in control plots by approximately 80% relative to exclosures, but most other species were unaffected. Shorebird predation did not result in an increase in diatom abundance, as predicted under the trophic cascade hypothesis. Fertilizer increased diatom abundance, but had no effect on Corophium abundance or bird predation, and little effect on other mudflat invertebrates. The only indirect effect observed was on mud snails (Ilyanassa obsoleta), which, by rapidly responding to changes in diatom abundance, compensated for both bird exclusion and fertilizer addition, and prevented the trophic cascade. This population response by snails, possibly stemming from competition with Corophium, probably contributed to the stability of the community. Our results provide an example of short-term compensation in a simple intertidal community, and highlight the importance of considering direct and indirect effects in community ecological studies. We conclude that while compensatory interactions that block trophic cascades may be more common in more complex ecosystems, they are not restricted to them.

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