Abstract

The annual migration and spawning event of Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) can lead to cross-boundary delivery of marine-derived nutrients from their carcasses into adjacent terrestrial ecosystems. The densities of some passerine species, including Pacific wrens (Troglodytes pacificus), have been shown to be positively correlated with salmon abundance along streams in Alaska and British Columbia, but mechanisms maintaining these densities remain poorly understood. Riparian areas near salmon streams could provide higher quality habitat for birds through greater food availability and more suitable vegetation structure for foraging and breeding, resulting in wrens maintaining smaller territories. We examined relationships between salmon biomass and Pacific wren territory size, competition, and habitat selection along 11 streams on the coast of British Columbia, Canada. We show that male wren densities increase and territory sizes decrease as salmon-spawning biomass increases. Higher densities result in higher rates of competition as male wrens countersing more frequently to defend their territories along streams with more salmon. Wrens were also more selective of the habitats they defended along streams with higher salmon biomass; they were 68% less likely to select low-quality habitat on streams with salmon compared with 46% less likely at streams without salmon. This suggests a potential trade-off between available high-quality habitat and the cost of competition that structures habitat selection. Thus, the marine-nutrient subsidies provided by salmon carcasses to forests lead to higher densities of wrens while shifting the economics of territorial defence toward smaller territories being defended more vigorously in higher quality habitats.

Highlights

  • Many seemingly disparate ecosystems are linked by the movement of species and nutrients across habitat boundaries [1]

  • We modeled the probability of wren territorial habitat selection as a function of vegetation characteristics, total salmon biomass in the stream, and year as predictors with stream as a random effect

  • This study presents evidence to suggest that nutrients from salmon carcasses shape trade-offs of territoriality for a species that does not directly feed on salmon, leading to higher densities along salmon streams

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Summary

Introduction

Many seemingly disparate ecosystems are linked by the movement of species and nutrients across habitat boundaries [1]. Predictable pulses of subsidies across ecotones can have a wide range of ecological impacts, from increasing local densities of consumers [2,3] to longer-term, comprehensive effects on recipient ecosystem productivity or community structure and stability [4,5]. Nutrient subsidies enter recipient communities at low trophic levels, but can propagate through multiple trophic levels [4,6,7]. These subsidies can increase local densities of direct consumers, leading to widespread consequences for food web dynamics [8,9].

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