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Diverse consumer guilds in intertidal communities of Oregon and the Republic of Panama and their effects on prey assemblages

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Diverse consumer guilds in intertidal communities of Oregon and the Republic of Panama and their effects on prey assemblages
Names Gaines, Steven D. (creator)
Lubchenco, Jane (advisor)
Date Issued 1982-09-28 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1983
Abstract Low intertidal communities of Oregon and Panama have many predator
and herbivore species. This diversity of consumers is important to the
organization of both communities because of qualitative differences
among the consumer species in their ability to circumvent specific prey
defenses. In Oregon, the red alga Iridaea cordata is protected by its
cuticle from damage by the isopod Idotea wosnesenskii; however, the
cuticle does not prevent feeding by three other common herbivores -
Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (sea urchin), Katharina tunicata (chiton),
and Collisella pelta (limpet). In Panama, limpets are protected from
predators by their shells, but different shell forms deter different
predators. Flat, thin shells are difficult for large, shell-crushing
predators (Diodon hystrix [fish], Ozius verreauxii [crab]) to seize, yet
they are easily drilled by gastropods (Thais melones, Acanthina
brevidentata). Thicker, more conical limpet shells pose a barrier to
drilling, but are easily grasped and crushed by fishes and crabs.
In both systems variability in defense effectiveness, in conjunction
with high feeding intensities, greatly influences prey distribution and
diversity. Two mechanisms are important. (1) When discrete habitats.
harbor dissimilar consumers, feeding enhances between-habitat prey
diversity (= spatial variance in species composition). Enhancement of
diversity occurs when different prey species fall victim to consumption
in different habitats. Via this mechanism, the Rhodophyte Iridaea is
frequently restricted to vertical rock surfaces when adjacent horizontal
areas harbor many cuticle-impartial herbivores. Similarly, among
Panamanian limpets the opposing effects of drilling and crushing
predators restrict flat limpets to smooth surfaces where predaceous
gastropods are rare, and conical limpets to crevices and holes where
larger predators cannot penetrate. (2) When dissimilar consumers cooccur
in the same habitat, their feeding can depress within-habitat prey
diversity by reducing the chance of prey escapes. A reduction in
diversity occurs through complementary effects when weaknesses of one
consumer are partly or wholly counteracted by strengths of another.
This mechanism is especially important in Panama in specific habitats
exposed to both crushing and drilling predators. Under such conditions
all limpet species are rare since no shell shape deters both predator
groups.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Predation (Biology)
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/41597

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