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Relative strengths of trait‐mediated and density‐mediated indirect effects of a predator vary with resource levels in a freshwater food chain
Author(s) -
Wojdak Jeremy M.,
Luttbeg Barney
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
oikos
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.672
H-Index - 179
eISSN - 1600-0706
pISSN - 0030-1299
DOI - 10.1111/j.0030-1299.2005.13869.x
Subject(s) - predation , predator , foraging , biology , trophic level , ecology , trophic cascade , functional response , trait , food chain , abundance (ecology) , computer science , programming language
Predators can affect the density and traits (e.g. morphology, behavior) of their prey, and either change may influence how prey interact with their resources. Thus, predators can interact indirectly with resource species (i.e. two trophic levels below) through two separate mechanisms. The relative strengths of these two kinds of indirect effects have rarely been compared directly, and how their relative importance varies across environmental gradients is virtually unknown. We investigated the relative strength of trait‐ and density‐mediated indirect effects of the predatory insect Belostoma flumineum on algal communities through predation on the pond snail, Physa gyrina , across a gradient of basal resource abundance. Because prey balance the benefits of foraging against the increased risk of predation while foraging, the availability of the prey's resource should influence the strength of anti‐predator behavioral responses and hence the strength of trait‐mediated indirect interactions. Belostoma presence had positive indirect effects on resources as expected and total predator effects were constant across the basal resource gradient. At low initial resource levels, trait‐mediated indirect effects on algal biomass exceeded density‐mediated indirect effects, while at high initial resources the reverse was true. Snails showed similar habitat use across the resource gradient suggesting that the anti‐predator response was most likely a depression of activity levels.