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A size-constrained feeding-niche model distinguishes predation patterns between aquatic and terrestrial food webs
Authors:Jingyi Li  Mingyu Luo  Shaopeng Wang  Benoit Gauzens  Myriam R. Hirt  Benjamin Rosenbaum  Ulrich Brose
Affiliation:1. Institute of Ecology, College of Urban and Environmental Sciences, and Key Laboratory for Earth Surface Processes of the Ministry of Education, Peking University, Beijing, China;2. Institute of Biodiversity, Friedrich Schiller University, Jena, Germany
Abstract:Understanding the formation of feeding links provides insights into processes underlying food webs. Generally, predators feed on prey within a certain body-size range, but a systematic quantification of such feeding niches is lacking. We developed a size-constrained feeding-niche (SCFN) model and parameterized it with information on both realized and non-realized feeding links in 72 aquatic and 65 terrestrial food webs. Our analyses revealed profound differences in feeding niches between aquatic and terrestrial predators and variation along a temperature gradient. Specifically, the predator–prey body-size ratio and the range in prey sizes increase with the size of aquatic predators, whereas they are nearly constant across gradients in terrestrial predator size. Overall, our SCFN model well reproduces the feeding relationships and predation architecture across 137 natural food webs (including 3878 species and 136,839 realized links). Our results illuminate the organisation of natural food webs and enables novel trait-based and environment-explicit modelling approaches.
Keywords:adjacency matrix  aquatic food webs  Bayesian statistics  body size  feeding niche  temperature  terrestrial food webs
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