Arid
DOI10.1007/s10021-017-0141-0
Strength of a Trophic Cascade Between an Apex Predator, Mammalian Herbivore and Grasses in a Desert Ecosystem Does Not Vary with Temporal Fluctuations in Primary Productivity
Letnic, Mike1; Feit, Anna1; Forsyth, David M.2
通讯作者Letnic, Mike
来源期刊ECOSYSTEMS
ISSN1432-9840
EISSN1435-0629
出版年2018
卷号21期号:1页码:153-165
英文摘要

There has long been debate regarding the primacy of bottom-up and top-down effects as factors shaping ecosystems. The exploitation ecosystems hypothesis (EEH) predicts that predators indirectly benefit plants because their top-down effects limit herbivores’ consumption of plants, and that the strength of trophic cascade increases with increasing primary productivity. However, in arid environments, pulses of primary productivity produced by irregular rainfall events could decouple herbivore-plant and predator-prey dynamics if high conversion efficiency from seed biomass to consumers allows the rapid build-up of consumer populations. Here, we test predictions of the EEH in an arid environment. We measured activity/abundances of dingoes, red kangaroos and grasses, and diet of dingoes, in landscapes where dingoes were culled or not culled over 3 years. Dingo activity was correlated with rainfall, and their tracks were less frequent at culled sites. Kangaroo abundance was greater at sites where dingoes were culled and increased with rainfall in the previous 6 months. Grass cover was greater at sites where dingoes were not culled and increased with rainfall in the previous 3 months. During a period of average rainfall, dingoes primarily consumed rodents and increased their consumption of kangaroos during a period of drier conditions. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that suppression of an apex predator triggers a trophic cascade, but are at odds with the EEH’s prediction that the magnitude of trophic cascades should increase with primary productivity. Our study demonstrates that temporal fluctuations in primary productivity can have effects on biomasses of plants and consumers which are in many ways analogous to those observed along spatial gradients of primary productivity.


英文关键词trophic cascade arid apex predator herbivore vegetation top down bottom up
类型Article
语种英语
国家Australia
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000425004400012
WOS关键词RED KANGAROOS ; EXPLOITATION ECOSYSTEMS ; LARGE CARNIVORES ; MACROPUS-RUFUS ; TOP PREDATORS ; BOTTOM-UP ; DINGO ; HYPOTHESIS ; AUSTRALIA ; GRADIENTS
WOS类目Ecology
WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/208862
作者单位1.Univ New South Wales, Sch Biol Earth & Environm Sci, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia;
2.Dept Primary Ind, Vertebrate Pest Res Unit, 1447 Forest Rd, Orange, NSW 2800, Australia
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Letnic, Mike,Feit, Anna,Forsyth, David M.. Strength of a Trophic Cascade Between an Apex Predator, Mammalian Herbivore and Grasses in a Desert Ecosystem Does Not Vary with Temporal Fluctuations in Primary Productivity[J],2018,21(1):153-165.
APA Letnic, Mike,Feit, Anna,&Forsyth, David M..(2018).Strength of a Trophic Cascade Between an Apex Predator, Mammalian Herbivore and Grasses in a Desert Ecosystem Does Not Vary with Temporal Fluctuations in Primary Productivity.ECOSYSTEMS,21(1),153-165.
MLA Letnic, Mike,et al."Strength of a Trophic Cascade Between an Apex Predator, Mammalian Herbivore and Grasses in a Desert Ecosystem Does Not Vary with Temporal Fluctuations in Primary Productivity".ECOSYSTEMS 21.1(2018):153-165.
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