Predator-Prey Role Reversal in a Marine Benthic Ecosystem
- 7 October 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 242 (4875) , 62-64
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.242.4875.62
Abstract
Two closely located islands on the west coast of South Africa support widely different benthic communities. The biota at Malgas Island is dominated by seaweeds and by rock lobsters that consume settling mussels, thereby preventing the establishment of the mussels. They also prey on whelks, although one speces, Burnupena papyracea, is protected from predation by a commensal bryozoan that covers its shell. Marcus Island has extensive mussel beds, but rock lobsters and seaweeds are virtually absent; whelks (mostly Burnupena spp.) occur at high densities. Rock lobsters transferred to Marcus Island were overwhelmed and consumed by the whelks, reversing the normal predatorprey relation between the two species. These two contrasting communities persisted during 4 years and may represent multiple states of the same ecosystem. This effective change of roles between a prey species and its chief predator may provide an intrinsic mechanism to maintain these states following the initial exclusion of the predator.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Contrasts between the benthic communities of subtidal hard substrata at Marcus and Malgas islands: a case of alternative stable states?South African Journal of Marine Science, 1988
- The Structure and Regulation of Some South American Kelp CommunitiesEcological Monographs, 1985
- Further Comments on the Evidence for Multiple Stable Points in Natural CommunitiesThe American Naturalist, 1985
- Preliminary investigations of predation by the whelk Morula marginalbaMarine Ecology Progress Series, 1984
- On the Evidence Needed to Judge Ecological Stability or PersistenceThe American Naturalist, 1983
- Dogger Bank itch. The allergen is (2-hydroxyethyl)dimethylsulfoxonium ionJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1980
- Aleuts, Sea Otters, and Alternate Stable-State CommunitiesScience, 1978
- Anti-fouling role of antibiotics produced by marine algae and bryozoansNature, 1977
- The Relation Between Lobster Abundance, Sea Urchins, and Kelp BedsJournal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 1972
- Eruption of Ungulate Populations, with Emphasis on Himalayan Thar in New ZealandEcology, 1970