首页> 外文期刊>Proceedings of the Royal Society. Biological sciences >Reciprocal abundance shifts of the intertidal sea stars, Evasterias troschelii and Pisaster ochraceus, following sea star wasting disease
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Reciprocal abundance shifts of the intertidal sea stars, Evasterias troschelii and Pisaster ochraceus, following sea star wasting disease

机译:逆海星的互惠丰富偏移,veaperias troschelii和pisaster ochraceus,后海星浪费疾病

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Disease emergence occurs within the context of ecological communities, and disease driven declines in host populations can lead to complex direct and indirect ecological effects. Varying effects of a single disease among multiple susceptible hosts could benefit relatively resistant species. Beginning in 2013, an outbreak of sea star wasting disease (SSWD) led to population declines of many sea star species along the west coast of North America. Through field surveys and laboratory experiments, we investigated how and why the relative abundances of two co-occurring sea star species, Evasterias troschelii and Pisaster ochraceus, shifted during the ongoing wasting epidemic in Burrard Inlet, British Columbia, Canada. We hypothesized that Evasterias is competitively inferior to Pisaster but more resistant to SSWD. Thus, we predicted that SSWD-induced declines of Pisaster could mitigate the negative effects of SSWD on Evasterias, as the latter would experience competitive release. We document shifts in sea star abundance from 2008-2017: Pisaster abundance and mean size declined during the outbreak, while Evasterias abundance increased from relatively rare to numerically dominant within the intertidal. When exposed to symptomatic sea stars, Pisaster and Evasterias both showed signs of SSWD, but transmission and susceptibility was lower in Evasterias. Despite diet overlap documented in our field surveys, Evasterias was not outcompeted by Pisaster in laboratory trails conducted with the relatively small Pisaster available after the outbreak. Interference competition with larger Pisaster, or prey exploitation by Pisaster during the summer when Evasterias is primarily subtidal, may explain the rarity of Evasterias prior to Pisaster declines. Our results suggest that indirect effects mediated by competition can mask some of the direct effects of disease outbreaks, and the combination of direct and indirect effects will determine the restructuring of a community after disturbanc
机译:疾病出现发生在生态社区的背景下,疾病驱动的宿主人口下降可能导致复杂的直接和间接生态效应。多种易感宿主之间的单一疾病的不同效果可以利用相对抗性的物种。从2013年开始,海星浪费疾病(SSWD)的爆发导致了北美西海岸的许多海星种类的人口下降。通过现场调查和实验室实验,我们调查了如何以及为什么两个共同发生的海星种类,澳大利亚州Troschelii和Pisaster Ochraceus的相对丰富,在加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省的不列颠哥伦比亚省的禁止进入的浪费流行病中。我们假设Veaperias竞争低于Pisaster但对SSWD的抵抗力较差。因此,我们预测,由于后者会经历竞争释放,SSWD诱导的Pisaster的下降可能会降低SSWD对江鱼鱼的负面影响。我们从2008 - 2017年的海星丰富的转变文件:Pisaster丰度和平均规模在爆发过程中下降,而江鱼鱼的丰富从相对罕见的跨度在数值占主导地位增加。当暴露于症状海星时,Pisaster和Evasterias都显示出SSWD的迹象,但VEAPERIS的传播和易感性较低。尽管在我们的野外调查中记录了饮食重叠,但VeapastiS在爆发后的相对较小的Pisaster进行的实验室踪迹中没有脱颖而出。在夏季主要对夏季主要对映射时,Pisaster的干扰竞争或Pisaster在夏季的猎物剥削,可以在Pisaster下降之前解释veaperias的稀有性。我们的研究结果表明,竞争介导的间接影响可以掩盖疾病爆发的一些直接影响,直接和间接效应的结合将决定干扰后社区的重组

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