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Predator diversity strengthens trophic cascades in kelp forests by modifying herbivore behaviour
Authors:Byrnes Jarrett  Stachowicz John J  Hultgren Kristin M  Randall Hughes A  Olyarnik Suzanne V  Thornber Carol S
Abstract:Although human-mediated extinctions disproportionately affect higher trophic levels, the ecosystem consequences of declining diversity are best known for plants and herbivores. We combined field surveys and experimental manipulations to examine the consequences of changing predator diversity for trophic cascades in kelp forests. In field surveys we found that predator diversity was negatively correlated with herbivore abundance and positively correlated with kelp abundance. To assess whether this relationship was causal, we manipulated predator richness in kelp mesocosms, and found that decreasing predator richness increased herbivore grazing, leading to a decrease in the biomass of the giant kelp Macrocystis. The presence of different predators caused different herbivores to alter their behaviour by reducing grazing, such that total grazing was lowest at highest predator diversity. Our results suggest that declining predator diversity can have cascading effects on community structure by reducing the abundance of key habitat-providing species.
Keywords:Behaviourally modified interaction  biodiversity ecosystem function  kelp forest  multiple predator effects  predator diversity  trait‐mediated indirect interactions  trophic cascade
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