Literature DB >> 35679394

Predator control of marine communities increases with temperature across 115 degrees of latitude.

Gail V Ashton1, Amy L Freestone1,2,3, J Emmett Duffy4, Mark E Torchin3,5, Brent J Sewall2, Brianna Tracy1,6, Mariano Albano7, Andrew H Altieri3,8, Luciana Altvater9, Rolando Bastida-Zavala10, Alejandro Bortolus11, Antonio Brante12,13, Viviana Bravo3, Norah Brown14,15, Alejandro H Buschmann16, Edward Buskey17, Rosita Calderón Barrera18, Brian Cheng19, Rachel Collin3, Ricardo Coutinho9, Luis De Gracia12,13, Gustavo M Dias20, Claudio DiBacco21, Augusto A V Flores22, Maria Angélica Haddad23, Zvi Hoffman24, Bruno Ibañez Erquiaga25, Dean Janiak26, Analí Jiménez Campeán27,28, Inti Keith18, Jean-Charles Leclerc12,29, Orlando Pedro Lecompte-Pérez30, Guilherme Ortigara Longo31, Helena Matthews-Cascon32, Cynthia H McKenzie33, Jessica Miller34, Martín Munizaga35,36,37, Lais P D Naval-Xavier9, Sergio A Navarrete38, Carlos Otálora30, Lilian A Palomino-Alvarez39,40, Maria Gabriela Palomo41, Chris Patrick42, Cormack Pegau43, Sandra V Pereda16, Rosana M Rocha23, Carlos Rumbold44, Carlos Sánchez24, Adolfo Sanjuan-Muñoz30, Carmen Schlöder3, Evangelina Schwindt45, Janina Seemann3,46, Alan Shanks47, Nuno Simoes40,48,49, Luis Skinner50, Nancy Yolimar Suárez-Mozo39,40, Martin Thiel35,36,37, Nelson Valdivia29,51, Ximena Velez-Zuazo52, Edson A Vieira31, Bruno Vildoso53, Ingo S Wehrtmann54, Matt Whalen4,14,55, Lynn Wilbur56, Gregory M Ruiz1.   

Abstract

Early naturalists suggested that predation intensity increases toward the tropics, affecting fundamental ecological and evolutionary processes by latitude, but empirical support is still limited. Several studies have measured consumption rates across latitude at large scales, with variable results. Moreover, how predation affects prey community composition at such geographic scales remains unknown. Using standardized experiments that spanned 115° of latitude, at 36 nearshore sites along both coasts of the Americas, we found that marine predators have both higher consumption rates and consistently stronger impacts on biomass and species composition of marine invertebrate communities in warmer tropical waters, likely owing to fish predators. Our results provide robust support for a temperature-dependent gradient in interaction strength and have potential implications for how marine ecosystems will respond to ocean warming.

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Year:  2022        PMID: 35679394     DOI: 10.1126/science.abc4916

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Science        ISSN: 0036-8075            Impact factor:   47.728


  1 in total

1.  Predator responses to prey camouflage strategies: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  João Vitor de Alcantara Viana; Camila Vieira; Rafael Campos Duarte; Gustavo Quevedo Romero
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2022-09-14       Impact factor: 5.530

  1 in total

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