Coexistence between the seastars Asterias vulgaris and A. forbesi in a heterogeneous environment: A non-equilibrium explanation
- 1 August 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oecologia
- Vol. 41 (3) , 245-272
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00377430
Abstract
The interaction between the sympatric, predaceous seastars, Asterias forbesi and A. vulgaris was studied for five years at eight study sites in northern New England. These species range in depth from the low intertidal to at least 50 m and cooccur over a broad geographic range from central Maine to Cape Hatteras. Both overlap greatly in times and intensity of feeding, body size, diet composition and size of prey consumed. Variations occur in these characteristics from site to site but are always positively correlated. Such similarity along resource dimensions is generally taken to indicate that species compete for resources. In this study, interspecific competition does not seem to occur. Though these seastars are generally smaller than their potential size, and food seems in short supply in some subhabitats, food seems unlimited in other subhabitats. Hence, exploitation competition probably occurs sporadically, not chronically, and is probably a weak selective agent. Laboratory experiments suggest that neither intra- nor interspecific aggression occurs between these seastars. Hence, interference competition seems non-existent in this case. Observations of massive mortality from disease and storms, large variations in seastar density, and a patchy food supply suggests that these populations are generally held below carrying capacity by a kaleidoscopic suite of selective agents. Under such conditions resource shortage would be unlikely to exert strong selective pressure. The high overlaps are thus most likely a reflection of the general absence of pressure to subdivide resources rather than an indication of severe competition. In studies of competition, ecological overlaps should be supplemented by other evidence, including experiments before they can be used as indications of competitive pressure.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Predator-Mediated Coexistence: A Nonequilibrium ModelThe American Naturalist, 1978
- Estimating the Diet of a Sluggish Predator from Field ObservationsJournal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 1978
- Density-Independent Mortality and Interspecific Competition: A Test of Pianka's Niche Overlap HypothesisThe American Naturalist, 1977
- Interspecific Competition Experienced by South African Patella SpeciesJournal of Animal Ecology, 1976
- Limiting similarity and the form of the competition coefficientTheoretical Population Biology, 1975
- Interference Competition and Niche TheoryProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1974
- Interactions between a Sea Pen and Seven of Its PredatorsEcological Monographs, 1974
- Ecology: Field Experiments in Marine EcologyPublished by Elsevier ,1974
- On the Measurement of Niche Breadth and OverlapEcology, 1971
- Feeding biology of the sea-starAstropecten irregularisPennantOphelia, 1970