Literature DB >> 31944271

Functional responses are maximized at intermediate temperatures.

Stella F Uiterwaal1, John P DeLong1.   

Abstract

Functional responses describe how consumer foraging rates change with resource density. Despite extensive research looking at the factors underlying foraging interactions, there remains ongoing controversy about how temperature and body size control the functional response parameters space clearance (or attack) rate and handling time. Here, we investigate the effects of temperature, consumer mass, and resource mass using the largest compilation of functional responses yet assembled. This compilation contains 2,083 functional response curves covering a wide range of foragers and prey types, environmental conditions, and habitats. After accounting for experimental arena size, dimensionality of the foraging interaction, and consumer taxon, we find that both space clearance rate and handling time are optimized at intermediate temperatures (a unimodal rather than monotonic response), suggesting that the response to global climate change depends on the location of the consumer's current temperature relative to the optimum. We further confirm that functional responses are higher and steeper for large consumers and small resources, and models using consumer and resource masses separately outperformed models using consumer:resource mass ratios, suggesting that consumer and resource body mass act independently to set interaction strengths. Lastly, we show that the extent to which foraging is affected by temperature or mass depends on the taxonomic identity of the consumer and the dimensionality of the consumer-resource interaction. We thus argue that although overall body size and temperature effects can be identified, they are not universal, and therefore food web and community modeling approaches could be improved by considering taxonomic identity along with body size and unimodal temperature effects.
© 2020 by the Ecological Society of America.

Keywords:  Arrhenius; body size; consumer; database; foraging; functional response; handling time; predator; prey; resource; space clearance rate; temperature

Year:  2020        PMID: 31944271     DOI: 10.1002/ecy.2975

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


  9 in total

1.  Trophic cascades alter eco-evolutionary dynamics and body size evolution.

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Authors:  John P DeLong; Shelby Lyon
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2020-06-19       Impact factor: 2.984

3.  Size, not temperature, drives cyclopoid copepod predation of invasive mosquito larvae.

Authors:  Marie C Russell; Alima Qureshi; Christopher G Wilson; Lauren J Cator
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4.  Functional Response of Harmonia axyridis to the Larvae of Spodoptera litura: The Combined Effect of Temperatures and Prey Instars.

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Review 5.  Smaller species but larger stages: Warming effects on inter- and intraspecific community size structure.

Authors:  Wojciech Uszko; Magnus Huss; Anna Gårdmark
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6.  Incorporating nonlinearity with generalized functional responses to simulate multiple predator effects.

Authors:  Michael W McCoy; Elizabeth Hamman; Molly Albecker; Jeremy Wojdak; James R Vonesh; Benjamin M Bolker
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2022-08-18       Impact factor: 3.061

7.  Quantifying predator functional responses under field conditions reveals interactive effects of temperature and interference with sex and stage.

Authors:  Kyle E Coblentz; Amber Squires; Stella Uiterwaal; John P Delong
Journal:  J Anim Ecol       Date:  2022-04-22       Impact factor: 5.606

8.  Functional response of Harmonia axyridis preying on Acyrthosiphon pisum nymphs: the effect of temperature.

Authors:  Yasir Islam; Farhan Mahmood Shah; Xu Rubing; Muhammad Razaq; Miao Yabo; Li Xihong; Xingmiao Zhou
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-06-30       Impact factor: 4.379

9.  Both consumptive and non-consumptive effects of predators impact mosquito populations and have implications for disease transmission.

Authors:  Marie C Russell; Catherine M Herzog; Zachary Gajewski; Chloe Ramsay; Fadoua El Moustaid; Michelle V Evans; Trishna Desai; Nicole L Gottdenker; Sara L Hermann; Alison G Power; Andrew C McCall
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2022-01-19       Impact factor: 8.140

  9 in total

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