| Literature DB >> 31168105 |
Robert M Pringle1, Tyler R Kartzinel2,3, Todd M Palmer4, Naomi A Man In 't Veld, Timothy J Thurman5,6,7, Kena Fox-Dobbs8, Charles C Y Xu5,7, Matthew C Hutchinson2, Tyler C Coverdale2,9, Joshua H Daskin2,10, Dominic A Evangelista11, Kiyoko M Gotanda5,7,12, Johanna E Wegener13, Jason J Kolbe13, Thomas W Schoener14, David A Spiller14, Jonathan B Losos15, Rowan D H Barrett5,7.
Abstract
Biological invasions are both a pressing environmental challenge and an opportunity to investigate fundamental ecological processes, such as the role of top predators in regulating biodiversity and food-web structure. In whole-ecosystem manipulations of small Caribbean islands on which brown anole lizards (Anolis sagrei) were the native top predator, we experimentally staged invasions by competitors (green anoles, Anolis smaragdinus) and/or new top predators (curly-tailed lizards, Leiocephalus carinatus). We show that curly-tailed lizards destabilized the coexistence of competing prey species, contrary to the classic idea of keystone predation. Fear-driven avoidance of predators collapsed the spatial and dietary niche structure that otherwise stabilized coexistence, which intensified interspecific competition within predator-free refuges and contributed to the extinction of green-anole populations on two islands. Moreover, whereas adding either green anoles or curly-tailed lizards lengthened food chains on the islands, adding both species reversed this effect-in part because the apex predators were trophic omnivores. Our results underscore the importance of top-down control in ecological communities, but show that its outcomes depend on prey behaviour, spatial structure, and omnivory. Diversity-enhancing effects of top predators cannot be assumed, and non-consumptive effects of predation risk may be a widespread constraint on species coexistence.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31168105 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1264-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962