The roles of productivity and ecosystem size in determining food chain length in tropical terrestrial ecosystems

Autor: Rodolfo Dirzo, Hillary S. Young, Michael S. Hutson, Ana Miller Ter-Kuile, Douglas J. McCauley, Robert B. Dunbar
Rok vydání: 2013
Předmět:
Zdroj: Ecology. 94:692-701
ISSN: 0012-9658
DOI: 10.1890/12-0729.1
Popis: Many different drivers, including productivity, ecosystem size, and disturbance, have been considered to explain natural variation in the length of food chains. Much remains unknown about the role of these various drivers in determining food chain length, and particularly about the mechanisms by which they may operate in terrestrial ecosystems, which have quite different ecological constraints than aquatic environments, where most food chain length studies have been thus far conducted. In this study, we tested the relative importance of ecosystem size and productivity in influencing food chain length in a terrestrial setting. We determined that (1) there is no effect of ecosystem size or productive space on food chain length; (2) rather, food chain length increases strongly and linearly with productivity; and (3) the observed changes in food chain length are likely achieved through a combination of changes in predator size, predator behavior, and consumer diversity along gradients in productivity. These results lend new insight into the mechanisms by which productivity can drive changes in food chain length, point to potential for systematic differences in the drivers of food web structure between terrestrial and aquatic systems, and challenge us to consider how ecological context may control the drivers that shape food chain length.
Databáze: OpenAIRE