Literature DB >> 31314929

Spatial trophic cascades in communities connected by dispersal and foraging.

David García-Callejas1, Roberto Molowny-Horas2, Miguel B Araújo3,4,5, Dominique Gravel6.   

Abstract

Pairwise interactions between species have both direct and indirect consequences that reverberate throughout the whole ecosystem. In particular, interaction effects may propagate in a spatial dimension, to localities connected by organismal movement. Here we study the propagation of interaction effects with a spatially explicit metacommunity model, where local sites are connected by dispersal, foraging, or by both types of movement. We show that indirect pairwise effects are, in most cases, of the same sign as direct effects if localities are connected by dispersing species. However, if foraging is prevalent, this correspondence is broken, and indirect effects between species often have a different sign than direct effects. This highlights the importance of indirect interactions across space and their inherent unpredictability in complex settings with species foraging across local patches. Further, the effect of a species over another in a local patch does not necessarily correspond to its effect at the metacommunity scale; this correspondence is again mediated by the type of movement across localities. Every species, despite their trophic position or spatial range, displays a non-zero net effect over every other species in our model metacommunities. Thus we show that local dynamics and local interactions between species can trigger indirect effects all across the set of connected patches, and these effects have a distinct signature depending on whether the prevalent connection between patches is via dispersal or via foraging. However, the magnitude of this effect between any two species strongly decays with the distance between them. These theoretical results strengthen the importance of considering indirect effects across species at both the community and metacommunity levels, highlight the differences between types of movement across locations, and thus open novel avenues for the study of interaction effects in spatially explicit settings.
© 2019 by the Ecological Society of America.

Keywords:  dispersal; foraging; indirect effects; interaction networks; metacommunity; spatial cascades; trophic cascades

Year:  2019        PMID: 31314929     DOI: 10.1002/ecy.2820

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  1 in total

1.  Network ecology in dynamic landscapes.

Authors:  Marie-Josée Fortin; Mark R T Dale; Chris Brimacombe
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2021-04-28       Impact factor: 5.349

  1 in total

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