Sökning: onr:"swepub:oai:slubar.slu.se:99375" >
Size-based ecologic...
Size-based ecological interactions drive food web responses to climate warming
-
- Lindmark, Max (författare)
- Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences,Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet,Institutionen för akvatiska resurser,Department of Aquatic Resources
-
- Huss, Magnus (författare)
- Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences,Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet,Institutionen för akvatiska resurser,Department of Aquatic Resources
-
- Gårdmark, Anna (författare)
- Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences,Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet,Institutionen för akvatiska resurser,Department of Aquatic Resources
-
(creator_code:org_t)
-
- 2019-02-28
- 2019
- Engelska.
-
Ingår i: Ecology Letters. - : Wiley. - 1461-023X .- 1461-0248. ; 22, s. 778-786
- Relaterad länk:
-
https://pub.epsilon.... (primary) (Raw object) (free)
-
visa fler...
-
https://onlinelibrar...
-
https://res.slu.se/i...
-
https://doi.org/10.1...
-
visa färre...
Abstract
Ämnesord
Stäng
- Predicting climate change impacts on animal communities requires knowledge of how physiological effects are mediated by ecological interactions. Food-dependent growth and within-species size variation depend on temperature and affect community dynamics through feedbacks between individual performance and population size structure. Still, we know little about how warming affects these feedbacks. Using a dynamic stage-structured biomass model with food-, size- and temperature-dependent life history processes, we analyse how temperature affects coexistence, stability and size structure in a tri-trophic food chain, and find that warming effects on community stability depend on ecological interactions. Predator biomass densities generally decline with warming - gradually or through collapses - depending on which consumer life stage predators feed on. Collapses occur when warming induces alternative stable states via Allee effects. This suggests that predator persistence in warmer climates may be lower than previously acknowledged and that effects of warming on food web stability largely depend on species interactions.
Ämnesord
- NATURVETENSKAP -- Biologi -- Ekologi (hsv//swe)
- NATURAL SCIENCES -- Biological Sciences -- Ecology (hsv//eng)
Publikations- och innehållstyp
- ref (ämneskategori)
- art (ämneskategori)
Hitta via bibliotek
Till lärosätets databas