Inducible defenses in prey intensify predator cannibalism
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概要
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Trophic cascades are often a potent force in ecological communities, but abiotic and biotic heterogeneity can diffuse their influence. For example, inducible defenses in many species create variation in prey edibility, and size-structured interactions, such as cannibalism, can shift predator diets away from heterospecific prey. Although both factors diffuse cascade strength by adding heterogeneity to trophic interactions, the consequences of their interaction remain poorly understood. We show that inducible defenses in tadpole prey greatly intensify cannibalism in predatory larval salamanders. The likelihood of cannibalism was also strongly influenced by asymmetries in salamander size that appear to be most important in the presence of defended prey. Hence, variation in prey edibility and the size structure of the predator may synergistically affect predator--prey population dynamics by reducing prey mortality and increasing predator mortality via cannibalism. We also suggest that the indirect effects of prey defenses may shape the evolution of predator traits that determine diet breadth and how trophic dynamics unfold in natural systems.
著者
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Nishimura Kinya
Graduate School Of Fisheries Sciences Hokkaido University
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KISHIDA Osamu
Center for Ecological Research, Kyoto University
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Kishida Osamu
Center For Ecological Research Kyoto University
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Trussell Geoffrey
Marine Science Center Northeastern University
関連論文
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- Geographic variation in a predator-induced defense and its genetic basis
- DIFFERENTIATED REACTION NORMS UNDER DIFFERENT SELECTIONS IN POLYMORPHISM: BROAD-HEADED MORPH IN HYNOBIUS RETARDATUS(Behavior Biology and Ecology)(Proceedings of the Seventy-Third Annual Meeting of the Zoological Society of Japan)
- GENETIC BASIS OF PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY FOR PREDATOR-INDUCED MORPHOLOGICAL DEFENSES IN ANURAN TADPOLE USING cDNA SUBTRACTION AND MICROARRAY ANALYSIS(Taxonomy and Systematics,Abstracts of papers presented at the 76^ Annual Meeting of the Zoological Soci
- Identification of a Novel Uromodulin-Like Gene Related to Predator-Induced Bulgy Morph in Anuran Tadpoles by Functional Microarray Analysis
- Inducible defenses in prey intensify predator cannibalism
- Evolutionary ecology of inducible morphological plasticity in predator-prey interaction : toward the practical links with population ecology