Indirect food web interactions mediated by rodent cycles: Relative roles of lemmings and voles
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/25389Dato
2013-12-23Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Production cycles in birds are proposed as prime cases of indirect interactions
in food webs. They are thought to be driven by predators switching from
rodents to bird nests in the crash phase of rodent population cycles. Although
rodent cycles are geographically widespread and found in different rodent
taxa, bird production cycles appear to be most profound in the high Arctic
where lemmings dominate. We hypothesized that this may be due to arctic
lemmings inducing stronger predator responses than boreal voles. We tested
this hypothesis by estimating predation rates in dummy bird nests during a
rodent cycle in low-Arctic tundra. Here, the rodent community consists of a
spatially variable mix of one lemming (Lemmus lemmus) and two vole species
(Myodes rufocanus and Microtus oeconomus) with similar abundances. In consistence with our hypothesis, lemming peak abundances predicted well
crash-phase nest predation rates, whereas the vole abundances had no predictive ability. Corvids were found to be the most important nest predators.
Lemmings appear to be accessible to the whole predator community which
makes them particularly powerful drivers of food web dynamics.
Forlag
The Royal Society PublishingSitering
Ims RA, Henden JAH, Thingnes AV, Killengreen St. Indirect food web interactions mediated by rodent cycles: Relative roles of lemmings and voles. Biology Letters. 2013;9(6)Metadata
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Copyright 2013 The Author(s)