Resource edibility and trophic exploitation in an old-field food web.
- 7 June 1994
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 91 (12) , 5364-5367
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.91.12.5364
Abstract
I tested a food web model that predicts how environmental productivity (nutrient supply) and top carnivores should mediate interactions among herbivores, edible plants, and plants that are resistant to herbivory because they possess anti-herbivore defenses. Feeding trials with the dominant grasshopper herbivore at the study site confirmed that certain plant species were resistant to herbivory because of protection by pubescent leaves and stems. Experimental food webs with various numbers of trophic levels composed of edible and resistant plants, grasshoppers, and hunting spiders were assembled in enclosure cages. I randomly assigned half of the cages to a nutrient-enrichment treatment and half remained as a control. Nutrient supply directly enhanced primary productivity and plant and herbivore biomass. Experimentally changing spider abundance caused a classic "trophic cascade" in which herbivore biomass increased and edible plant biomass decreased. Resistant plant biomass increased. These results matched predictions of the model with one exception. A trophic cascade was not observed under enriched conditions. The study nevertheless shows that a simple model attempting to explain heterogeneous interactions in food webs may give considerable insight into the dynamics of natural systems.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Productivity, consumers, and the structure of a river food chain.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1993
- A controlled trial of intra‐operative autologous transfusion in cardiothoracic surgery measuring effect on transfusion requirements and clinical outcomeTransfusion Medicine, 1992
- Effects of Fish in River Food WebsScience, 1990
- Leaf pubescence in buttonwood: Community variation in a putative defense against defoliationProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1987
- Analysis of ventricular shape by echocardiography in normal fetuses, newborns, and infants.Circulation, 1983