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Bottom-up regulation of a pelagic community through spatial aggregations - not biomass

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Title Bottom-up regulation of a pelagic community through spatial aggregations - not biomass
Names Benoit-Bird, Kelly J. (creator)
McManus, Margaret A. (creator)
Date Issued 2012-10-23 (iso8601)
Note This is the author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published article is copyrighted by The Royal Society and can be found at: http://rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org/.
Abstract The importance of spatial pattern in ecosystems has long been recognized. However,
incorporating patchiness into our understanding of forces regulating ecosystems has proven
challenging. We used a combination of continuously sampling moored sensors complemented by
shipboard sampling to measure the temporal variation, abundance, and vertical distribution of
four trophic levels in Hawaii's nearshore pelagic ecosystem. Using an analysis approach from
trophic dynamics, we found that the frequency and intensity of spatial aggregations, rather than
total biomass, in each step of a food chain involving phytoplankton, copepods, mesopelagic
micronekton, and spinner dolphins (Stenella longirostris) were the most significant predictors of
variation in adjacent trophic levels. Patches of organisms had impacts disproportionate to the
biomass of organisms within them, masking resource limitation in this ecosystem. Our results are
in accordance with resource limitation - mediated by patchiness - regulating structure at each
trophic step in this ecosystem, as well as the foraging behaviour of the top predator. Because of
their high degree of heterogeneity, ecosystem-level effects of patchiness like this may be
common in pelagic marine systems.
Genre Article
Topic Tropho-dynamics
Identifier Benoit-Bird, K., & McManus, M. (2012). Bottom-up regulation of a pelagic community through spatial aggregations. Biology Letters, 8(5), 813-816. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2012.0232

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