Food-web structure varies along environmental gradients in a high-latitude marine ecosystem
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/14267Dato
2018-05-17Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Kortsch, Susanne; Primicerio, Raul; Aschan, Michaela; Lind, Sigrid; Dolgov, Andrey V.; Planque, BenjaminSammendrag
Large-scale patterns in species diversity and community composition are associated
with environmental gradients, but the implications of these patterns for food-web
structure are still unclear. Here, we investigated how spatial patterns in food-web
structure are associated with environmental gradients in the Barents Sea, a highly productive
shelf sea of the Arctic Ocean. We compared food webs from 25 subregions
in the Barents Sea and examined spatial correlations among food-web metrics, and
between metrics and spatial variability in seawater temperature, bottom depth and
number of days with ice cover. Several food-web metrics were positively associated
with seawater temperature: connectance, level of omnivory, clustering, cannibalism,
and high variability in generalism, while other food-web metrics such as modularity
and vulnerability were positively associated with sea ice and negatively with temperature.
Food-web metrics positively associated with habitat heterogeneity were: number
of species, link density, omnivory, path length, and trophic level. This finding suggests
that habitat heterogeneity promotes food-web complexity in terms of number of species
and link density. Our analyses reveal that spatial variation in food-web structure along
the environmental gradients is partly related to species turnover. However, the higher
interaction turnover compared to species turnover along these gradients indicates a
consistent modification of food-web structure, implying that interacting species may
co-vary in space. In conclusion, our study shows how environmental heterogeneity, via
environmental filtering, influences not only turnover in species composition, but also
the structure of food webs over large spatial scales.
Beskrivelse
Source at: http://doi.org/10.1111/ecog.03443