Abstract
Seabirds deposit large amounts of nutrient rich guano on their nesting islands. The increased nutrient availability strongly affects plants and consumers. Consumer response differs among taxonomic groups, but mechanisms causing these differences are poorly understood. Ecological stoichiometry might provide tools to understand these mechanisms. ES suggests that nutrient rich taxa are more likely to be nutrient limited than nutrient poorer taxa and are more favored under nutrient enrichment. Here, we quantified differences in the elemental composition of soil, plants, and consumers between islands with and without nesting cormorant colonies and tested predictions made based on ES by relating the elemental composition and the eventual mismatch between consumer and resource stoichiometry to observed density differences among the island categories. We found that nesting cormorants radically changed the soil nutrient content and thereby indirectly plant nutrient content and resource quality to herbivores. In contrast, consumers showed only small differences in their elemental composition among the island categories. While we cannot evaluate the cause of the apparent homeostasis of invertebrates without additional data, we can conclude that from the perspective of the next trophic level, there is no difference in diet quality (in terms of N and P content) between island categories. Thus, bottom-up effects seemed mainly be mediated via changes in resource quantity not quality. Despite a large potential trophic mismatch we were unable to observe any relation between the invertebrate stoichiometry and their density response to nesting cormorant colonies. We conclude that in our system stoichiometry is not a useful predictor of arthropod responses to variation in resource nutrient content. Furthermore, we found no strong evidence that resource quality was a prime determinant of invertebrate densities. Other factors like resource quantity, habitat structure and species interactions might be more important or masked stoichiometric effects.
Highlights
Seabirds strongly affect the nutrient pools on their nesting islands by depositing huge amounts of nitrogen and phosphorus rich guano [1,2]
While plants often show high variability in nutrient content, due to an ability to store excess nutrients in the vacuoles, herbivores rather excrete excess nutrients and thereby maintain a stoichiometric homeostasis [27]. The generality of this strict stoichiometric homeostasis has recently been questioned and the results of several studies show that the C:N:P ratio of some heterotroph species varies with diet nutrient content (e.g., [10,28], reviewed by [29]) or predation risk [30]
We examined the relationship between consumer and resource stoichiometry by the homeostasis coefficient H: H~
Summary
Seabirds strongly affect the nutrient pools on their nesting islands by depositing huge amounts of nitrogen and phosphorus rich guano [1,2] They have been reported to increase plant nutrient content and primary productivity and to change plant species composition [3,4,5], but extremely high nest densities may lead to decrease primary production and vegetation cover due to ammonia poisoning [6,7]. Such qualitative and quantitative changes in primary producers are likely to strongly affect higher trophic levels [8,9,10]. The generality of this strict stoichiometric homeostasis has recently been questioned and the results of several studies show that the C:N:P ratio of some heterotroph species varies with diet nutrient content (e.g., [10,28], reviewed by [29]) or predation risk [30]
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