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A cross-ecosystem comparison of the strength of trophic cascades
Authors:Jonathan B Shurin  Elizabeth T Borer  Eric W Seabloom  Kurt Anderson  Carol A Blanchette  Bernardo Broitman  Scott D Cooper  Benjamin S Halpern
Institution:National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis, University of California- Santa Barbara, 735 State St., Suite 300, Santa Barbara, CA 93101, USA;Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology, University of California- Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, USA
Abstract:Although trophic cascades (indirect effects of predators on plants via herbivores) occur in a wide variety of food webs, the magnitudes of their effects are often quite variable. We compared the responses of herbivore and plant communities to predator manipulations in 102 field experiments in six different ecosystems: lentic (lake and pond), marine, and stream benthos, lentic and marine plankton, and terrestrial (grasslands and agricultural fields). Predator effects varied considerably among systems and were strongest in lentic and marine benthos and weakest in marine plankton and terrestrial food webs. Predator effects on herbivores were generally larger and more variable than on plants, suggesting that cascades often become attenuated at the plant–herbivore interface. Top‐down control of plant biomass was stronger in water than on land; however, the differences among the five aquatic food webs were as great as those between wet and dry systems.
Keywords:Cross-system comparison  indirect effects  meta-analysis  predation  top-down control  trophic structure
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