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1.
Ecology ; 100(7): e02723, 2019 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30973962

RESUMO

Detrital-based trophic cascades are often considered weak or absent in tropical stream ecosystems because of the prevalence of omnivorous macroconsumers and the dearth of leaf-shredding insects. In this study, we isolate top-down effects of three macroconsumer species on detrital processing in headwater streams draining Trinidad's northern mountains. We separated effects of different macroconsumers by experimentally manipulating their temporal access to isolated benthic habitat over the diel cycle. We found no evidence that omnivorous macroconsumers, including a freshwater crab (Eudaniela garmani) and guppy (Poecilia reticulata), increased leaf decomposition via consumption. By contrast, above a waterfall excluding guppies, the insectivorous killifish, Anablepsoides hartii, reduced the biomass of the leaf-shredding insect Phylloicus hansoni 4-fold, which consequently reduced leaf decomposition rates 1.6-fold. This detrital cascade did not occur below the barrier waterfall, where omnivorous guppies join the assemblage and reduce killifish densities; here killifish had no significant effects on Phylloicus or decomposition rates. These patterns of detrital processing were also observed in upstream-downstream comparisons in a landscape study across paired reaches of six streams. Above waterfalls, where killifish were present, but guppies absent, leaf decomposition rates and Phylloicus biomass were 2.5- and ~35-fold lower, respectively, compared to measurements below waterfalls. Moreover, the strength of top-down control by killifish is reflected by the 20- and 5-fold reductions in variability (±SE) surrounding mean Phylloicus biomass and leaf decomposition rates in upstream relative to downstream reaches where no top-down control was detected. Findings show a clear, detrital-based trophic cascade among killifish, a leaf-shredding insect, and leaf decomposition rates. Results also show how omnivorous guppies disrupt this cascade by depressing killifish densities, thereby releasing invertebrate shredders from predation, and significantly increasing decomposition rates. Moreover, this combination of direct and indirect trophic interactions drives patterns in decomposition rates in stream networks at a landscape scale, resulting in significantly lower rates of decomposition above vs. below barrier waterfalls. Our findings reveal that omnivory can result in significant indirect effects on a key ecosystem process, illustrating the importance of these hidden trophic pathways in detrital-based systems and suggesting that resource control in tropical systems may be even more complex than previously envisioned.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Poecilia , Animais , Biomassa , Folhas de Planta , Comportamento Predatório , Trinidad e Tobago
2.
Evolution ; 71(2): 373-385, 2017 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27718225

RESUMO

Species coexistence may result by chance when co-occurring species do not strongly interact or it may be an evolutionary outcome of strongly interacting species adapting to each other. Although patterns like character displacement indicate that coexistence has often been an evolutionary outcome, it is unclear how often the evolution of coexistence represents adaptation in only one species or reciprocal adaptation among all interacting species. Here, we demonstrate a strong role for evolution in the coexistence of guppies and killifish in Trinidadian streams. We experimentally recreated the temporal stages in the invasion and establishment of guppies into communities that previously contained only killifish. We combined demographic responses of guppies and killifish with a size-based integral projection model to calculate the fitness of the phenotypes of each species in each of the stages of community assembly. We show that guppies from locally adapted populations that are sympatric with killifish have higher fitness when paired with killifish than guppies from allopatric populations. This elevated fitness involves effects traceable to both guppy and killifish evolution. We discuss the implications of our results to the study of species coexistence and how it may be mediated through eco-evolutionary feedbacks.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Ciprinodontiformes/genética , Aptidão Genética , Animais , Biota , Comportamento Competitivo , Fenótipo , Trinidad e Tobago
3.
Biol Bull ; 220(1): 32-8, 2011 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21385955

RESUMO

Increasing current velocity has been negatively correlated with the fertilization success of marine broadcast-spawning invertebrates. Seagrass has been shown to affect seawater hydrodynamics by slowing the movement of water. In this study we aimed to tease apart the relationship between fertilization success in sea urchins inside and outside of seagrass beds in St. Joseph Bay, Florida. Fluorescein dye diffusion, as a proxy for gamete diffusion, indicated higher rates of diffusion in sand habitats outside of seagrass beds. We quantified the proportion of eggs that remained on a female compared to being advected off a female over a 2-min interval in and out of grass beds. More eggs were collected inside of seagrass beds than over sand habitats, suggesting increased residence time of gametes within the beds. We induced sea urchins to spawn in experimental arrays in and out of grass beds and measured the fertilization success of eggs released from females and captured in the water column with a plankton pump. The fertilization success of eggs was significantly higher in grass beds. We concluded that seagrasses have the potential to mitigate gamete diffusion and increase the reproductive success of broadcast-spawning species that spawn in them.


Assuntos
Ouriços-do-Mar/fisiologia , Animais , Fertilização , Florida , Água do Mar
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