Spatial Patterns and Dynamic Responses of Arctic Food Webs Corroborate the Exploitation Ecosystems Hypothesis (EEH)
- 1 February 2008
- journal article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The American Naturalist
- Vol. 171 (2) , 249-262
- https://doi.org/10.1086/524951
Abstract
According to the exploitation ecosystems hypothesis (EEH), productive terrestrial ecosystems are characterized by community-level trophic cascades, whereas unproductive ecosystems harbor food-limited grazers, which regulate community-level plant biomass. We tested this hypothesis along arctic-alpine productivity gradients at the Joatka field base, Finnmark, Norway. In unproductive habitats, mammalian predators were absent and plant biomass was constant, whereas herbivore biomass varied, reflecting the productivity of the habitat. In productive habitats, predatory mammals were persistently present and plant biomass varied in space, but herbivore biomass did not. Plant biomass of productive tundra scrublands declined by 40% when vegetation blocks were transferred to predation-free islands. Corresponding transfer to herbivore-free islands triggered an increase in plant biomass. Fertilization of an unproductive tundra heath resulted in a fourfold increase in rodent density and a corresponding increase in winter grazing activity, whereas the total aboveground plant biomass remained unchanged. These results corroborate the predictions of the EEH, implying that the endotherm community and the vegetation of the North European tundra behaves dynamically as if each trophic level consisted of a single population, in spite of local co-occurrence of >20 plant species representing different major taxonomic groups, growth forms, and defensive strategies.Keywords
This publication has 100 references indexed in Scilit:
- The strength of trophic cascades across ecosystems: predictions from allometry and energeticsJournal of Animal Ecology, 2005
- Aspen age structure in the northern Yellowstone ecosystem: USAForest Ecology and Management, 2003
- Wolf reintroduction, predation risk, and cottonwood recovery in Yellowstone National ParkPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Palaeoecological investigations towards the reconstruction of the history of forest clearances and coastal heathlands in south-western NorwayVegetation History and Archaeobotany, 2000
- Persistent Suppression in Dwarf Birch after Release from Heavy Summer Browsing by CaribouArctic and Alpine Research, 1998
- Natural regulation of cervidae along a 1000 km latitudinal gradient: Change in trophic dominanceEvolutionary Ecology, 1996
- Impact of Food and Predation on the Snowshoe Hare CycleScience, 1995
- The responses of unstable food chains to enrichmentEvolutionary Ecology, 1994
- Effect of Increased Productivity on the Abundances of Trophic LevelsThe American Naturalist, 1993
- Coupling in predator-prey dynamics: Ratio-DependenceJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1989