Transferability of biotic interactions: temporal consistency of arctic plant-rodent relationships is poor
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/14137Dato
2018-09-17Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Soininen, Eeva M; Henden, John-André; Ravolainen, Virve; Yoccoz, Nigel Gilles; Bråthen, Kari Anne; Killengreen, Siw Turid; Ims, Rolf AnkerSammendrag
Variability in biotic interaction strength is an integral part of food web functioning.
However, the consequences of the spatial and temporal variability of biotic interactions
are poorly known, in particular for predicting species abundance and distribution.
The amplitude of rodent population cycles (i.e., peak-phase abundances) has
been hypothesized to be determined by vegetation properties in tundra ecosystems.
We assessed the spatial and temporal predictability of food and shelter plants effects
on peak-phase small rodent abundance during two consecutive rodent population
peaks. Rodent abundance was related to both food and shelter biomass during the
first peak, and spatial transferability was mostly good. Yet, the temporal transferability
of our models to the next population peak was poorer. Plant–rodent interactions
are thus temporally variable and likely more complex than simple one-directional
(bottom-up) relationships or variably overruled by other biotic interactions and abiotic
factors. We propose that parametrizing a more complete set of functional links
within food webs across abiotic and biotic contexts would improve transferability of
biotic interaction models. Such attempts are currently constrained by the lack of data
with replicated estimates of key players in food webs. Enhanced collaboration between
researchers whose main research interests lay in different parts of the food
web could ameliorate this.
Beskrivelse
Source at: http://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4399