Document of bibliographic reference 117152

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Predator diversity and density affect levels of predation upon strongly interactive species in temperate rocky reefs
Abstract
Indirect effects of predators in the classic trophic cascade theory involve the effects of basal species (e.g. primary producers) mediated by predation upon strongly interactive consumers (e.g. grazers). The diversity and density of predators, and the way in which they interact, determine whether and how the effects of different predators on prey combine. Intraguild predation, for instance, was observed to dampen the effects of predators on prey in many ecosystems. In marine systems, species at high trophic levels are particularly susceptible to extinction (at least functionally). The loss of such species, which is mainly attributed to human activities (mostly fishing), is presently decreasing the diversity of marine predators in many areas of the world. Experimental studies that manipulate predator diversity and investigate the effects of this on strongly interactive consumers (i.e. those potentially capable of causing community-wide effects) in marine systems are scant, especially in the rocky sublittoral. I established an experiment that utilised cage enclosures to test whether the diversity and density of fish predators (two sea breams and two wrasses) would affect predation upon juvenile and adult sea urchins, the most important grazers in Mediterranean sublittoral rocky reefs. Changes in species identity (with sea breams producing major effects) and density of predators affected predation upon sea urchins more than changes in species richness per se. Predation upon adult sea urchins decreased in the presence of multiple predators, probably due to interference competition between sea breams and wrasses. This study suggests that factors that influence both fish predator diversity and density in Mediterranean rocky reefs (e.g. fishing and climate change) may have the potential to affect the predators’ ability to control sea urchin population density, with possible repercussions for the whole benthic community structure.
WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000251146900008
Bibliographic citation
Guidetti, P. (2007). Predator diversity and density affect levels of predation upon strongly interactive species in temperate rocky reefs. Oecologia 154(3): 513-520. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-007-0845-5
Is peer reviewed
true

Authors

author
Name
Paolo Guidetti
Identifier
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7983-8775

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-007-0845-5

thesaurus terms

term
Biomanipulation (term code: 9474 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)
Predator prey interactions (term code: 9585 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)
Predators (term code: 6508 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)
Prey (term code: 6534 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)
Reefs (term code: 6816 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)
Trophic levels (term code: 8758 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)

geographic terms

geographic terms associated with this publication
AE, Mediterranean Water

Document metadata

date created
2007-11-23
date modified
2018-05-17