墨西哥湾北部捕食者和猎物体型的环境控制

L. Calderaro, P. Harnik, Marina C. Rillo
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摘要

密西西比河向墨西哥湾北部输送了大量营养丰富的淡水,为沿海地区的初级生产力提供了动力。这些浮游植物大量繁殖的需氧分解导致了地球上最广泛的死区之一。相比之下,初级生产力和缺氧在墨西哥湾东北部更为有限,那里的沿海环境是由较小的流域提供的。初级生产力、氧气利用率和海面温度等环境因素如何塑造沿海食物网?在这里,我们利用全新世的死亡组合来研究底栖软体动物捕食者和猎物体型大小的环境相关性。线性混合效应模型结果表明,溶解氧浓度对双壳类的大小和钻食频率均有影响;随着氧气浓度的降低,双壳瓣尺寸增大,钻井频率降低。海洋表面温度与捕食者和猎物的大小呈正相关,而净初级生产力对捕食者和猎物的大小影响不大。捕食者与猎物的大小比与考虑的任何环境因素都没有显著关联。在氧气有限的地区发现的较大的双壳类可能是由于捕食压力减少,导致更长的猎物寿命。具有足够溶解氧的温暖水域也可能提供合适的生长条件,以增加双壳类和掠食性腹足类的大小。全新世死亡组合可用于测试长期存在的关于环境控制在地质时期对捕食者-猎物体型分布的假设,并为评估人为富营养化和变暖对沿海食物网的持续影响提供基线。
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Environmental Controls on Predator and Prey Body Size in the Northern Gulf of Mexico
The Mississippi River delivers vast quantities of nutrient-rich freshwater to the northern Gulf of Mexico, fueling primary productivity in the coastal zone. Aerobic decomposition of these phytoplankton blooms has resulted in one of the most extensive dead zones on Earth. In contrast, primary productivity and hypoxia are more limited in the northeastern Gulf, where coastal environments are fed by smaller watersheds. How do environmental factors such as primary productivity, oxygen availability, and sea surface temperature shape coastal food webs? Here, we investigate environmental correlates of predator and prey body size in benthic mollusks using Holocene death assemblages. Results of linear mixed effects models indicate that bivalve size and the frequency of drilling predation are both influenced by dissolved oxygen concentrations; bivalve size increases and drilling frequency decreases with declining oxygen levels. Sea surface temperature is positively associated with predator and prey size, whereas net primary productivity has little effect on the size of predators or prey. Predator-to-prey size ratios were not significantly associated with any of the environmental factors considered. Larger bivalves found in oxygen-limited areas may be due to decreased predation pressure, resulting in greater prey longevity. Warmer waters with sufficient dissolved oxygen may also provide suitable growth conditions to increase the size of bivalves and predatory gastropods. Holocene death assemblages can be used to test long-standing hypotheses regarding environmental controls on predator-prey body size distributions through geologic time and provide baselines for assessing the ongoing effects of anthropogenic eutrophication and warming on coastal food webs.
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