Predator hunting mode influences patterns of prey use from grazing and epigeic food webs |
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Authors: | Gina M. Wimp Shannon M. Murphy Danny Lewis Margaret R. Douglas Ramya Ambikapathi Lie’Ann Van-Tull Claudio Gratton Robert F. Denno |
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Affiliation: | 1. Biology Department, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, 20057, USA 2. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Denver, Denver, CO, 80208, USA 3. Department of Entomology, Pennsylvania State University, State College, PA, 16802, USA 4. GES Department, University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD, 21045, USA 5. Department of Entomology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, 53706, USA 6. Department of Entomology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, 20742, USA
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Abstract: | Multichannel omnivory by generalist predators, especially the use of both grazing and epigeic prey, has the potential to increase predator abundance and decrease herbivore populations. However, predator use of the epigeic web (soil surface detritus/microbe/algae consumers) varies considerably for reasons that are poorly understood. We therefore used a stable isotope approach to determine whether prey availability and predator hunting style (active hunting vs. passive web-building) impacted the degree of multichannel omnivory by the two most abundant predators on an intertidal salt marsh, both spiders. We found that carbon isotopic values of herbivores remained constant during the growing season, while values for epigeic feeders became dramatically more enriched such that values for the two webs converged in August. Carbon isotopic values for both spider species remained midway between the two webs as values for epigeic feeders shifted, indicating substantial use of prey from both food webs by both spider species. As the season progressed, prey abundance in the grazing food web increased while prey abundance in the epigeic web remained constant or declined. In response, prey consumption by the web-building spider shifted toward the grazing web to a much greater extent than did consumption by the hunting spider, possibly because passive web-capture is more responsive to changes in prey availability. Although both generalist predator species engaged in multichannel omnivory, hunting mode influenced the extent to which these predators used prey from the grazing and epigeic food webs, and could thereby influence the strength of trophic cascades in both food webs. |
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