Copepods act as a switch between alternative trophic cascades in marine pelagic food webs

Title
Copepods act as a switch between alternative trophic cascades in marine pelagic food webs
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2004
Authors

Stibor H, Vadstein O, Diehl S, Gelzleichter A, Hansen T, Hantzsche F, Katechakis A, Lippert B, Løseth K, Peters C, Roederer W, Sandow M, Sundt-Hansen L, Olsen Y

Journal
Ecology Letters
Volume
7
Pagination
321-328
ISBN Number
Keywords

Indirect effects, meta analysis, predation, top down, trophic structure, food chain theory, mesocosm, Hopavagen, Norway, 4 m3

Abstract

A recent meta-analysis indicates that trophic cascades (indirect effects of predators on plants via herbivores) are weak in marine plankton in striking contrast to freshwater plankton (Shurin et al. 2002, Ecol. Lett., 5, 785–791). Here we show that in a marine plankton community consisting of jellyfish, calanoid copepods and algae, jellyfish predation consistently reduced copepods but produced two distinct, opposite responsesof algal biomass. Calanoid copepods act as a switch between alternative trophic cascades along food chains of different length and with counteracting effects on algal biomass.Copepods reduced large algae but simultaneously promoted small algae by feeding on ciliates. The net effect of jellyfish on total algal biomass was positive when large algae were initially abundant in the phytoplankton, negative when small algae were dominant, but zero when experiments were analysed in combination. In contrast to marine systems, major pathways of energy flow in Daphnia-dominated freshwater systems are of similar chain length. Thus, differences in the length of alternative, parallel food chains mayexplain the apparent discrepancy in trophic cascade strength between freshwater and marine planktonic systems.

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