Data for: Interactions between temperature and predation impact insect emergence in alpine lakes
While insect populations are simultaneously threatened by many local and global scale stressors, the interacting effects of these factors remain poorly understood. These interactions between stressors, whether additive or antagonistic, may have profound effects on our assumptions about and predictio...
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Zusammenfassung: | While insect populations are simultaneously threatened by many local and
global scale stressors, the interacting effects of these factors remain
poorly understood. These interactions between stressors, whether additive
or antagonistic, may have profound effects on our assumptions about and
predictions for any given system. Here we address this gap by exploring
the interactive effects of introduced predators and elevated temperatures
on emerging aquatic insects across alpine lakes. Using a crossed factorial
field survey, we examine whether warmer temperatures either directly
affect the magnitude or diversity of insect emergence, or mediate the
impacts of predation via interactions with predator presence. Based on
data from >11,000 insects collected across a two-year period, we
find a 71% reduction in insect emergence associated with an additional
3.6° C of water temperature in oligotrophic alpine lakes. While our work
confirms prior findings that predator presence drives strong reductions in
insect emergence, we find that the effects of predation are significantly
weaker in warmer lakes (2% reduction in warmest lakes studied vs 75%
reduction in coldest). Combining our results with regional studies of
predator communities to identify mechanisms suggests that the interaction
effects between temperature and predator presence are likely due to
changes in predator behavior across temperatures. Critically, to fully
understand the multiple stressors that impact insect populations and
predict their future effects we must consider the interactions between
stressors across spatial scales. |
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DOI: | 10.25349/d9qw5x |