Community context mediates the top-down vs. bottom-up effects of grazers on rocky shores
Interactions between grazers and autotrophs are complex, including both top-down consumptive and bottom-up facilitative effects of grazers. Thus, in addition to consuming autotrophs, herbivores can also enhance autotroph biomass by recycling limiting nutrients, thereby increasing nutrient availabili...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ecology (Durham) 2014-06, Vol.95 (6), p.1458-1463 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Interactions between grazers and autotrophs are complex, including both top-down consumptive and bottom-up facilitative effects of grazers. Thus, in addition to consuming autotrophs, herbivores can also enhance autotroph biomass by recycling limiting nutrients, thereby increasing nutrient availability. Here, we evaluated these consumptive and facilitative interactions between snails (
Littorina littorea
) and seaweeds (
Fucus vesiculosus
and
Ulva lactuca
) on a rocky shore. We partitioned herbivores' total effects on seaweeds into their consumptive and facilitative effects and evaluated how community context (the presence of another seaweed species) modified the effects of
Littorina
on a focal seaweed species.
Ulva
, the more palatable species, enhanced the facilitative effects of
Littorina
on
Fucus. Ulva
did not modify the consumptive effect of
Littorina
on
Fucus
. Taken together, the consumptive and facilitative effects of snails on
Fucus
in the presence of
Ulva
balanced each other, resulting in no net effect of
Littorina
on
Fucus
. In contrast, the only effect of
Fucus
on
Ulva
was to enhance consumptive effects of
Littorina
on
Ulva
. Our results highlight the necessity of considering both consumptive and facilitative effects of herbivores on multiple autotroph species in order to gain a mechanistic understanding of grazers' top-down and bottom-up roles in structuring communities. |
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ISSN: | 0012-9658 1939-9170 |
DOI: | 10.1890/13-2094.1 |