scholarly journals Abyssal food-web model indicates faunal carbon flow recovery and impaired microbial loop 26 years after a sediment disturbance experiment

2020 ◽  
Vol 189 ◽  
pp. 102446
Author(s):  
Daniëlle S.W. de Jonge ◽  
Tanja Stratmann ◽  
Lidia Lins ◽  
Ann Vanreusel ◽  
Autun Purser ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruben Ceulemans ◽  
Laurie Anne Myriam Wojcik ◽  
Ursula Gaedke

Biodiversity decline causes a loss of functional diversity, which threatens ecosystems through a dangerous feedback loop: this loss may hamper ecosystems' ability to buffer environmental changes, leading to further biodiversity losses. In this context, the increasing frequency of climate and human-induced excessive loading of nutrients causes major problems in aquatic systems. Previous studies investigating how functional diversity influences the response of food webs to disturbances have mainly considered systems with at most two functionally diverse trophic levels. Here, we investigate the effects of a nutrient pulse on the resistance, resilience and elasticity of a tritrophic---and thus more realistic---plankton food web model depending on its functional diversity. We compare a non-adaptive food chain with no diversity to a highly diverse food web with three adaptive trophic levels. The species fitness differences are balanced through trade-offs between defense/growth rate for prey and selectivity/half-saturation constant for predators. We showed that the resistance, resilience and elasticity of tritrophic food webs decreased with larger perturbation sizes and depended on the state of the system when the perturbation occured. Importantly, we found that a more diverse food web was generally more resistant, resilient, and elastic. Particularly, functional diversity dampened the probability of a regime shift towards a non-desirable alternative state. In addition, despite the complex influence of the shape and type of the dynamical attractors, the basal-intermediate interaction determined the robustness against a nutrient pulse. This relationship was strongly influenced by the diversity present and the third trophic level. Overall, using a food web model of realistic complexity, this study confirms the destructive potential of the positive feedback loop between biodiversity loss and robustness, by uncovering mechanisms leading to a decrease in resistance, resilience and elasticity as functional diversity declines.


Food Webs ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 17 ◽  
pp. e00091 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ainoa Vilalta-Navas ◽  
Rodrigo Beas-Luna ◽  
Luis E. Calderon-Aguilera ◽  
Lydia Ladah ◽  
Fiorenza Micheli ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Huda Abdul Satar ◽  
Raid Kamel Naji

In this paper a prey-predator-scavenger food web model is proposed and studied. It is assumed that the model considered the effect of harvesting and all the species are infected by some toxicants released by some other species. The stability analysis of all possible equilibrium points is discussed. The persistence conditions of the system are established. The occurrence of local bifurcation around the equilibrium points is investigated. Numerical simulation is used and the obtained solution curves are drawn to illustrate the results of the model. Finally, the nonexistence of periodic dynamics is discussed analytically as well as numerically.


2016 ◽  
Vol 331 ◽  
pp. 17-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
Moritz Stäbler ◽  
Alexander Kempf ◽  
Steven Mackinson ◽  
Jan Jaap Poos ◽  
Clement Garcia ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Behzad Mostajir ◽  
Serge Demers ◽  
Stephen J. De Mora ◽  
Robert P. Bukata ◽  
John H. Jerome

2010 ◽  
Vol 87 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 186-200 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shin-ichi Ito ◽  
Naoki Yoshie ◽  
Takeshi Okunishi ◽  
Tsuneo Ono ◽  
Yuji Okazaki ◽  
...  

Ecology ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 83 (7) ◽  
pp. 1845-1859 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacques C. Finlay ◽  
Sapna Khandwala ◽  
Mary E. Power
Keyword(s):  
Food Web ◽  

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