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Resource tracking in marine parasites: going with the flow?
Authors:Ross M Thompson  Robert Poulin  Kim N Mouritsen  David W Thieltges
Institution:Inst. for Applied Ecology, Univ. of Canberra, Bruce ACT 2601, Australia, Australian Centre for Biodiversity and School of Biological Sciences, Monash Univ., Clayton, VIC3800, Australia.
Abstract:Understanding how diversity interacts with energy supply is of broad ecological interest. Most studies to date have investigated patterns within trophic levels, reflecting a lack of food webs which include information on energy flow. We added parasites to a published marine energy‐flow food web, to explore whether parasite diversity is correlated with energy flow to host taxa. Parasite diversity was high with 36 parasite taxa affecting 40 of the 51 animal taxa. Adding parasites increased the number of trophic links per species, trophic link strength, connectance, and food chain lengths. There was evidence of an asymptotic relationship between energy flowing through a food chain and parasite diversity, although there were clear outliers. High parasite diversity was associated with host taxa which were highly connected within the food web. This suggests that energy flow through a taxon may favour parasite diversity, up to a maximal value. The evolutionary and energetic basis for that limitation is of key interest in understanding the basis for parasite diversity in natural food webs and thus their role in food web dynamics.
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