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Wasp-waist populations and marine ecosystem dynamics: Navigating the predator pit topographies

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PROGRESS IN OCEANOGRAPHY
卷 68, 期 2-4, 页码 271-288

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PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.pocean.2006.02.004

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ecosystem management; environmental conditions; population dynamics; predator-prey interaction; temporal variation; trophic relationships

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Many marine ecosystems exhibit a characteristic wasp-waist structure, where a single species, or at most several species, of small planktivorous fishes entirely dominate their trophic level. These species have complex life histories that result in radical variability that may propagate to both higher and lower trophic levels of the ecosystem. In addition, these populations have two key attributes: (1) they represent the lowest trophic level that is mobile, so they are capable of relocating their area of operation according to their own internal dynamics; (2) they may prey upon the early life stages of their predators, forming an unstable feedback loop in the trophic system that may, for example, precipitate abrupt regime shifts. Experience with the typical boom-bust dynamics of this type of population, and with populations that interact trophically with them, suggests a predator pit type of dynamics. This features a refuge from predation when abundance is very low, very destructive predation between an abundance level sufficient to attract interest from predators and an abundance level sufficient to satiate available predators, and, as abundance increases beyond this satiation point, decreasing specific predation mortality and population breakout. A simple formalism is developed to describe these dynamics. Examples of its application include (a) a hypothetical mechanism for progressive geographical habitat expansion at high biomass, (b) an explanation for the out-of-phase alternations of abundances of anchovies and sardines in many regional systems that appear to occur without substantial adverse interactions between the two species groups, and (c) an account of an interaction of environmental processes and fishery exploitation that caused a regime shift. The last is the example of the Baltic Sea, where the cod resource collapsed in concert with establishment of dominance of that ecosystem by the cod's 'wasp-waist prey, herring and sprat. (C) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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