| Literature DB >> 22304245 |
Tomohiro Kuwae1, Eiichi Miyoshi1, Shinya Hosokawa1, Kazuhiko Ichimi1, Jun Hosoya1, Tatsuya Amano1, Toshifumi Moriya1, Michio Kondoh1, Ronald C Ydenberg1, Robert W Elner1.
Abstract
Food webs are comprised of a network of trophic interactions and are essential to elucidating ecosystem processes and functions. However, the presence of unknown, but critical networks hampers understanding of complex and dynamic food webs in nature. Here, we empirically demonstrate a missing link, both critical and variable, by revealing that direct predator-prey relationships between shorebirds and biofilm are widespread and mediated by multiple ecological and evolutionary determinants. Food source mixing models and energy budget estimates indicate that the strength of the missing linkage is dependent on predator traits (body mass and foraging action rate) and the environment that determines food density. Morphological analyses, showing that smaller bodied species possess more developed feeding apparatus to consume biofilm, suggest that the linkage is also phylogenetically dependent and affords a compelling re-interpretation of niche differentiation. We contend that exploring missing links is a necessity for revealing true network structure and dynamics.Keywords: Behavioural ecology; feeding ecology; foraging behaviour; functional morphology; omnivory; phylogeny; tongue spine; trophic relationship; wader
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22304245 DOI: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2012.01744.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecol Lett ISSN: 1461-023X Impact factor: 9.492