Multivariate Climate Change Can Favor Large Herbivore Body Size in Food Webs

2018 ◽  
Vol 191 (3) ◽  
pp. 333-342 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauren M. Smith-Ramesh ◽  
Adam E. Rosenblatt ◽  
Oswald J. Schmitz
2021 ◽  
pp. 417-452
Author(s):  
Paul Schmid-Hempel

Host ecological characteristics, such as body size, longevity, or social living, affect parasitism. Host populations can be regulated in size by their parasites; they can even drive host populations to extinction, usually after hosts have been weakened by other factors. Parasites, therefore, threaten endangered populations and species. Parasites also affect host ecological communities and food webs via effects on competitive ability or with apparent competition. In diverse host communities, infectious diseases become ‘diluted’. Parasite ecological communities seem to have a variable and transient structure; no universal explanation for the observed patterns exists. Host migration can transfer parasites to new areas or leave parasites behind. Disease emergence from an animal reservoir (zoonoses) is especially important. Many human diseases have such an origin, and these have repeatedly caused major epidemics. Climate change will also affect parasitism; however, the direction of change is rather complex and depends on the particular systems.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pianpian Wu ◽  
Martin J. Kainz ◽  
Fernando Valdés ◽  
Siwen Zheng ◽  
Katharina Winter ◽  
...  

AbstractClimate change scenarios predict increases in temperature and organic matter supply from land to water, which affect trophic transfer of nutrients and contaminants in aquatic food webs. How essential nutrients, such as polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA), and potentially toxic contaminants, such as methylmercury (MeHg), at the base of aquatic food webs will be affected under climate change scenarios, remains unclear. The objective of this outdoor mesocosm study was to examine how increased water temperature and terrestrially-derived dissolved organic matter supply (tDOM; i.e., lake browning), and the interaction of both, will influence MeHg and PUFA in organisms at the base of food webs (i.e. seston; the most edible plankton size for zooplankton) in subalpine lake ecosystems. The interaction of higher temperature and tDOM increased the burden of MeHg in seston (< 40 μm) and larger sized plankton (microplankton; 40–200 μm), while the MeHg content per unit biomass remained stable. However, PUFA decreased in seston, but increased in microplankton, consisting mainly of filamentous algae, which are less readily bioavailable to zooplankton. We revealed elevated dietary exposure to MeHg, yet decreased supply of dietary PUFA to aquatic consumers with increasing temperature and tDOM supply. This experimental study provides evidence that the overall food quality at the base of aquatic food webs deteriorates during ongoing climate change scenarios by increasing the supply of toxic MeHg and lowering the dietary access to essential nutrients of consumers at higher trophic levels.


2012 ◽  
Vol 279 (1741) ◽  
pp. 3291-3297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Russell E. Naisbit ◽  
Rudolf P. Rohr ◽  
Axel G. Rossberg ◽  
Patrik Kehrli ◽  
Louis-Félix Bersier

Food webs are the complex networks of trophic interactions that stoke the metabolic fires of life. To understand what structures these interactions in natural communities, ecologists have developed simple models to capture their main architectural features. However, apparently realistic food webs can be generated by models invoking either predator–prey body-size hierarchies or evolutionary constraints as structuring mechanisms. As a result, this approach has not conclusively revealed which factors are the most important. Here we cut to the heart of this debate by directly comparing the influence of phylogeny and body size on food web architecture. Using data from 13 food webs compiled by direct observation, we confirm the importance of both factors. Nevertheless, phylogeny dominates in most networks. Moreover, path analysis reveals that the size-independent direct effect of phylogeny on trophic structure typically outweighs the indirect effect that could be captured by considering body size alone. Furthermore, the phylogenetic signal is asymmetric: closely related species overlap in their set of consumers far more than in their set of resources. This is at odds with several food web models, which take only the view-point of consumers when assigning interactions. The echo of evolutionary history clearly resonates through current food webs, with implications for our theoretical models and conservation priorities.


Author(s):  
Ute Jacob ◽  
Aaron Thierry ◽  
Ulrich Brose ◽  
Wolf E. Arntz ◽  
Sofia Berg ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Matías Arim ◽  
Mauro Berazategui ◽  
Juan M. Barreneche ◽  
Lucia Ziegler ◽  
Matías Zarucki ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Daniel C. Reuman ◽  
Christian Mulder ◽  
Carolin Banašek‐Richter ◽  
Marie‐France Cattin Blandenier ◽  
Anton M. Breure ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Fabien Moullec ◽  
Fabio Benedetti ◽  
Claire Saraux ◽  
Elisabeth Van Beveren ◽  
Yunne-Jai Shin

2011 ◽  
Vol 271 (1) ◽  
pp. 106-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander E. Zook ◽  
Anna Eklof ◽  
Ute Jacob ◽  
Stefano Allesina
Keyword(s):  

2006 ◽  
Vol 93 (3) ◽  
pp. 110-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Piotr Tryjanowski ◽  
Tim Sparks ◽  
Mariusz Rybacki ◽  
Leszek Berger

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