Comparing energetic and dynamic descriptions of a single food web linkage
Authored by Thomas R Hrabik, Brian M Roth, Christopher T Solomon, Zanden M Jake Vander
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0706.2010.18424.x
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Food webs are a unifying concept that spans population, community, and
ecosystem ecology. Yet there is a fundamental dissonance between dynamic
food webs, which derive from community ecology and characterize the
effect of one species upon another, and energetic-based food webs, which
have their roots in ecosystem ecology and characterize the flow of
energy and matter among species and trophic levels. Here, we present a
framework that explicitly defines food web linkage strength in terms of
two key factors: the type of data (energetic vs dynamic), and the
trophic perspective (whether the interaction is viewed from the
perspective of the consumer or the resource). As a case study, we
applied this framework to the well-studied trophic interaction between
rainbow smelt Osmerus mordax and cisco Coregonus artedii in Sparkling
Lake, Wisconsin, USA. Energetic and dynamic metrics gave different
descriptions of the linkage strength from the perspective of either
species. This was particularly true from the cisco perspective: the
dynamic metric indicated a strong linkage because smelt extirpated
cisco, but the energetic metric indicated a weak linkage because smelt
prey on cisco larvae and the flux from cisco to smelt was therefore a
small fraction of cisco production. Our approach highlights the need for
more careful consideration of how food web linkages and their importance
are characterized. Furthermore, it can provide the basis for translating
energetic data to an understanding of food web dynamics.
Tags
Individual-based model
Region
Communities
Laurentian great-lakes
Smelt osmerus-mordax
Rainbow smelt
Yellow perch
Fishes
Interaction strengths