The primacy of top-down effects in shallow benthic ecosystems

被引:156
作者
Heck, K. L., Jr. [1 ]
Valentine, J. F. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ S Alabama, Dauphin Isl Sea Lab, Dauphin Isl, AL 36528 USA
关键词
MEDIATED INDIRECT INTERACTIONS; ZOSTERA-MARINA L; TROPHIC CASCADES; NUTRIENT ENRICHMENT; CORAL-REEFS; THALASSIA-TESTUDINUM; SEAGRASS; FISH; NITROGEN; ESTUARINE;
D O I
10.1007/BF02819384
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Individual scientists, scientific organizations, and government agencies have all concluded that eutrophication is among the most detrimental of all human activities in coastal ecosystems; very large amounts of funding have been earmarked to study the negative consequences of nutrient pollution. Most studies of eutrophication have been conducted long after the numbers and diversity of larger marine consumers were dramatically reduced by centuries of intense harvesting. It is now understood that these once abundant predators played pivotal roles in regulating ecosystem structure and function, and that the widespread overharvesting of large consumers can trigger indirect effects that alter species compositions in ways that are very similar to those reported to result from eutrophication. All of this suggests that we should reevaluate whether the many negative effects attributed to eutrophication are actually a result of nutrient additions or whether they may be the result of the indirect effects of dramatically altered coastal food webs. In this essay, we review experimental assessments of the degree to which changes in consumer abundances have indirectly altered the structure of benthic ecosystems in coastal waters, and on the relative importance of top-down and bottom-up effects on coral reefs, rocky shores, and seagrass meadows. We find that the evidence clearly indicates that indirect consumer effects are the primary drivers of coastal benthic ecosystem structure and function.
引用
收藏
页码:371 / 381
页数:11
相关论文
共 129 条
  • [101] Trophic cascades: the primacy of trait-mediated indirect interactions
    Schmitz, OJ
    Krivan, V
    Ovadia, O
    [J]. ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2004, 7 (02) : 153 - 163
  • [102] Continuing trophic cascade effects after 25 years of no-take marine reserve protection
    Shears, NT
    Babcock, RC
    [J]. MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 2003, 246 : 1 - 16
  • [103] Shepard SA., 1989, Biology of seagrasses: A treatise on seagrass with special reference to the Australian region, P346
  • [104] Are mangroves nursery habitat for transient fishes and decapods?
    Sheridan, P
    Hays, C
    [J]. WETLANDS, 2003, 23 (02) : 449 - 458
  • [105] MESOCOSM EXPERIMENTS QUANTIFY THE EFFECTS OF EUTROPHICATION ON EELGRASS, ZOSTERA-MARINA
    SHORT, FT
    BURDICK, DM
    KALDY, JE
    [J]. LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY, 1995, 40 (04) : 740 - 749
  • [106] A cross-ecosystem comparison of the strength of trophic cascades
    Shurin, JB
    Borer, ET
    Seabloom, EW
    Anderson, K
    Blanchette, CA
    Broitman, B
    Cooper, SD
    Halpern, BS
    [J]. ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2002, 5 (06) : 785 - 791
  • [107] Emergent impacts of multiple predators on prey
    Sih, A
    Englund, G
    Wooster, D
    [J]. TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 1998, 13 (09) : 350 - 355
  • [108] Drought, snails, and large-scale die-off of southern US salt marshes
    Silliman, BR
    van de Koppel, J
    Bertness, MD
    Stanton, LE
    Mendelssohn, IA
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2005, 310 (5755) : 1803 - 1806
  • [109] Atrophic cascade regulates salt marsh primary production
    Silliman, BR
    Bertness, MD
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2002, 99 (16) : 10500 - 10505
  • [110] Steneck Robert S., 2005, P110