Food web structure and body size: trophic position and resource acquisition
Authored by Pablo A Marquet, Sebastian R Abades, Matias Arim, Gabriel Laufer, Marcelo Loureiro
Date Published: 2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0706.2009.17768.x
Sponsors:
Chile National Fund for Scientific and Technological Development (FONDECYT)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Ulrich Brose Body size is recognized as an important determinant of
trophic structure as it affects individual energetic demands, population
density, and the interaction between potential prey and predators.
However, its relationship with trophic position remains unclear. It has
been hypothesized that a positive relationship between body size and
trophic position would be associated to some particular trophic
structures, which would allow larger organisms to satisfy their
energetic demand and sustain viable population sizes at higher trophic
positions, where fewer resources are available. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed the diet of 619 killifishes from four species (Austrolebias
cheradophilus, A. luteoflammulatus, A. viarius and Cynopoecilus
melanotaenia), collected in temporary ponds occurring in the grasslands
of Rocha, Uruguay. Trophic position, diet richness, number of energy
sources, and evenness were estimated for 20 size classes, formed by
consecutive groups of 31 individuals. Gape limitation and preference for
the larger available prey were evaluated as explanations for observed
patterns with an individual based model (IBM). In agreement with the
hypothesis, killifishes presented a strong positive relationship between
trophic position and body size (R2=0.86), associated with a trophic
structure that could allow larger organisms to have access to more
energy from the environment. This was reflected in a positive
relationship between body size and 1) prey richness, 2) number of basal
energy sources (i.e. plants, detritus, phytoplankton and terrestrial
prey), and 3) evenness in prey use. IBM results showed that changes in
trophic structure with body size are well explained by gape limitation, but not by size preferences. Our results suggest that the fulfilment of
the greater energetic demands of larger organism will depend on
community diversity, which typically increases with ecosystem size, indicating a novel connection between area, diversity, body size, and
food chain length.
Tags
Productivity
stability
Temperature
Fish
Communities
Top predators
Abundance
Richness
Chain length
Mass