Abstract

Ecological interactions may be mediated by density, trait characteristics or both. In trophic interactions, density mediated indirect effects are related to consumption among trophic levels, whereas trait mediated indirect effects are known to interfere substantially in the foraging process by changing behavior, physiology and/or morphology of the species involved, thereby affecting the species’ overall consumption rate. Empirical works report the existence of trait mediated indirect effects in natural systems and their marked influence on food web dynamics. The present study shows that trait and density effects can significantly alter transient phase, long-term dynamics, species coexistence and stability of two specific multispecies chains: (i) a tritrophic food chain; (ii) a tritrophic food chain with allochthonous input to the consumer level. This may point to the important role of density and trait mediated interactions in food web theory.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call