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Coral reef mesopredators switch prey, shortening food chains, in response to habitat degradation

机译:珊瑚礁中膜繁殖者会因栖息地退化而切换猎物,缩短食物链

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Abstract Diet specificity is likely to be the key predictor of a predator's vulnerability to changing habitat and prey conditions. Understanding the degree to which predatory coral reef fishes adjust or maintain prey choice, in response to declines in coral cover and changes in prey availability, is critical for predicting how they may respond to reef habitat degradation. Here, we use stable isotope analyses to characterize the trophic structure of predator?¢????prey interactions on coral reefs of the Keppel Island Group on the southern Great Barrier Reef, Australia. These reefs, previously typified by exceptionally high coral cover, have recently lost much of their coral cover due to coral bleaching and frequent inundation by sediment-laden, freshwater flood plumes associated with increased rainfall patterns. Long-term monitoring of these reefs demonstrates that, as coral cover declined, there has been a decrease in prey biomass, and a shift in dominant prey species from pelagic plankton-feeding damselfishes to territorial benthic algal-feeding damselfishes, resulting in differences in the principal carbon pathways in the food web. Using isotopes, we tested whether this changing prey availability could be detected in the diet of a mesopredator (coral grouper, Plectropomus maculatus ). The ???′ 13 C signature in grouper tissue in the Keppel Islands shifted from a more pelagic to a more benthic signal, demonstrating a change in carbon sources aligning with the change in prey availability due to habitat degradation. Grouper with a more benthic carbon signature were also feeding at a lower trophic level, indicating a shortening in food chains. Further, we found a decline in the coral grouper population accompanying a decrease in total available prey biomass. Thus, while the ability to adapt diets could ameliorate the short-term impacts of habitat degradation on mesopredators, long-term effects may negatively impact mesopredator populations and alter the trophic structure of coral reef food webs.
机译:摘要饮食特异性可能是捕食者易变的栖息地和猎物状况的关键预测指标。了解珊瑚掠夺性鱼类对珊瑚覆盖率下降和猎物可利用性变化做出调整或维持猎物选择的程度,对于预测它们对珊瑚礁栖息地退化的反应至关重要。在这里,我们使用稳定的同位素分析来表征澳大利亚大堡礁南部吉宝岛群珊瑚礁上食肉动物的营养结构。这些珊瑚礁以前以异常高的珊瑚覆盖率为代表,最近由于珊瑚褪色和因沉积物增多,淡水洪水羽流频繁淹没以及降雨模式增加而丧失了大部分珊瑚覆盖率。对这些珊瑚礁的长期监测表明,随着珊瑚覆盖率的下降,猎物生物量减少,主要捕食物种从浮游生物喂养的豆娘转变为底栖藻类喂养的豆娘,导致珊瑚礁的差异。食物网中的主要碳途径。使用同位素,我们测试了是否可以在中捕食者(珊瑚石斑鱼,Plectropomus maculatus)的饮食中检测到这种变化的猎物可利用性。吉宝群岛石斑鱼组织中的13 C特征从一个更上层的信号转变为一个更底层的信号,这表明碳源的变化与栖息地退化引起的猎物可利用性变化相吻合。具有底栖碳特征的石斑鱼也以较低的营养水平进食,表明食物链缩短。此外,我们发现随着可用猎物总生物量减少,珊瑚石斑鱼种群减少。因此,尽管适应饮食的能力可以减轻栖息地退化对中食者的短期影响,但长期影响可能对中食者产生负面影响,并改变珊瑚礁食物网的营养结构。

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