首页> 外文期刊>Oecologia >Warming-induced shifts in amphibian phenology and behavior lead to altered predator-prey dynamics
【24h】

Warming-induced shifts in amphibian phenology and behavior lead to altered predator-prey dynamics

机译:两栖候选和行为中的变暖诱导的变化导致捕食者 - 猎物动态改变

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Climate change-induced phenological variation in amphibians can disrupt time-sensitive processes such as breeding, hatching, and metamorphosis, and can consequently alter size-dependent interactions such as predation. Temperature can further alter size-dependent, predator-prey relationships through changes in species' behavior. We thus hypothesized that phenological shifts due to climate warming would alter the predator-prey dynamic in a larval amphibian community through changes in body size and behavior of both the predator and prey. We utilized an amphibian predator-prey system common to the montane wetlands of the U.S. Pacific Northwest: the long-toed salamander (Ambystoma macrodactylum) and its anuran prey, the Pacific chorus frog (Pseudacris regilla). We conducted predation trials to test if changes in predator phenology and environmental temperature influence predation success. We simulated predator phenological shifts using different size classes of the long-toed salamander representing an earlier onset of breeding while using spring temperatures corresponding to early and mid-season larval rearing conditions. Our results indicated that the predator-prey dynamic was highly dependent upon predator phenology and temperature, and both acted synergistically. Increased size asymmetry resulted in higher tadpole predation rates and tadpole tail damage. Both predators and prey altered activity and locomotor performance in warmer treatments. Consequently, behavioral modifications resulted in decreased survival rates of tadpoles in the presence of large salamander larvae. If predators shift to breed disproportionately earlier than prey due to climate warming, this has the potential to negatively impact tadpole populations in high-elevation amphibian assemblages through changes in predation rates mediated by behavior.
机译:气候变化诱导的两栖动物的酚类变异可以破坏时间敏感的过程,如育种,孵化和变态,并且可以改变诸如捕食的大小依赖性相互作用。通过物种行为的变化,温度可以进一步改变大小依赖的捕食者 - 猎物关系。因此,我们假设气候变暖引起的诸如捕食者和捕食者的行为的变化将改变捕食者 - 捕食者动态。我们利用了美国太平洋西北部的蒙太金湿地共同的两栖捕食者 - 猎物系统:长达烤蝾螈(Ambystoma MacRodactylum)及其鞍氏猎物,太平洋合唱青蛙(Pseudacris Regilla)。我们进行了捕食试验,以测试捕食者候选和环境温度影响捕食成功。我们使用不同尺寸类的长趾蝾螈模拟了捕食者似的转变,其代表早期的繁殖开始,同时使用与早期和中季幼虫饲养条件相对应的春季温度。我们的结果表明,捕食者 - 猎物动态高度依赖于捕食者候选和温度,并且两者均可协同作用。增加的尺寸不对称导致蝌蚪捕食率较高,蝌蚪尾部损伤。捕食者和猎物的活动和运动在较温暖的处理中的性能。因此,在大蝾螈幼虫存在下,行为修饰导致蝌蚪的存活率降低。如果捕食者由于气候变暖而比猎物更早地转变为繁殖,这有可能通过行为介导的捕食率的变化对高升高两栖组合中的蝌蚪群体产生负面影响。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号