Data from: Influence of intra- and interspecific variation in predator-prey body size ratios on trophic interaction strengths
1. Predation is a pervasive force that structures food webs and directly influences ecosystem functioning. The relative body sizes of predators and prey may be an important determinant of interaction strengths. However, studies quantifying the combined influence of intra- and interspecific variation...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Predation is a pervasive force that structures food webs and directly
influences ecosystem functioning. The relative body sizes of predators and
prey may be an important determinant of interaction strengths. However,
studies quantifying the combined influence of intra- and interspecific
variation in predator-prey body size ratios are lacking. 2. We use a
comparative functional response approach to examine interaction strengths
between three size classes of invasive bluegill and largemouth bass
towards three scaled size classes of their tilapia prey. We then quantify
the influence of intra- and interspecific predator-prey body mass ratios
on the scaling of attack rates and handling times. 3. Type II functional
responses were displayed by both predators across all predator and prey
size classes. Largemouth bass consumed more than bluegill at small and
intermediate predator size classes, whilst large predators of both species
were more similar. Small prey were most vulnerable overall, however
differential attack rates among prey were emergent across predator sizes.
For both bluegill and largemouth bass, small predators exhibited higher
attack rates towards small and intermediate prey sizes, whilst larger
predators exhibited greater attack rates towards large prey. Conversely,
handling times increased with prey size, with small bluegill exhibiting
particularly low feeding rates towards medium-large prey types. Attack
rates for both predators peaked unimodally at intermediate predator-prey
body mass ratios, whilst handling times generally shortened across
increasing body mass ratios. 4. We thus demonstrate effects of body size
ratios on predator-prey interaction strengths between key fish species,
with attack rates and handling times dependent on the relative sizes of
predator-prey participants. 5. Considerations for intra- and interspecific
body size ratio effects are critical for predicting the strengths of
interactions within ecosystems and may drive differential ecological
impacts among invasive species as size ratios shift. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.7m0cfxppt |