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Global patterns in the impact of marine herbivores on benthic primary producers
Author(s) -
Poore Alistair G. B.,
Campbell Alexandra H.,
Coleman Ross A.,
Edgar Graham J.,
Jormalainen Veijo,
Reynolds Pamela L.,
Sotka Erik E.,
Stachowicz John J.,
Taylor Richard B.,
Vanderklift Mathew A.,
Emmett Duffy J.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
ecology letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.852
H-Index - 265
eISSN - 1461-0248
pISSN - 1461-023X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2012.01804.x
Subject(s) - herbivore , ecology , intertidal zone , benthic zone , abundance (ecology) , habitat , biology , latitude , grazing , geography , geodesy
Despite the importance of consumers in structuring communities, and the widespread assumption that consumption is strongest at low latitudes, empirical tests for global scale patterns in the magnitude of consumer impacts are limited. In marine systems, the long tradition of experimentally excluding herbivores in their natural environments allows consumer impacts to be quantified on global scales using consistent methodology. We present a quantitative synthesis of 613 marine herbivore exclusion experiments to test the influence of consumer traits, producer traits and the environment on the strength of herbivore impacts on benthic producers. Across the globe, marine herbivores profoundly reduced producer abundance (by 68% on average), with strongest effects in rocky intertidal habitats and the weakest effects on habitats dominated by vascular plants. Unexpectedly, we found little or no influence of latitude or mean annual water temperature. Instead, herbivore impacts differed most consistently among producer taxonomic and morphological groups. Our results show that grazing impacts on plant abundance are better predicted by producer traits than by large‐scale variation in habitat or mean temperature, and that there is a previously unrecognised degree of phylogenetic conservatism in producer susceptibility to consumption.