On the context-dependent scaling of consumer feeding rates

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Abstract

The stability of consumer-resource systems can depend on the form of feeding interactions (i.e. functional responses). Size-based models predict interactions - and thus stability - based on consumer-resource size ratios. However, little is known about how interaction contexts (e.g. simple or complex habitats) might alter scaling relationships. Addressing this, we experimentally measured interactions between a large size range of aquatic predators (4-6400 mg over 1347 feeding trials) and an invasive prey that transitions among habitats: from the water column (3D interactions) to simple and complex benthic substrates (2D interactions). Simple and complex substrates mediated successive reductions in capture rates - particularly around the unimodal optimum - and promoted prey population stability in model simulations. Many real consumer-resource systems transition between 2D and 3D interactions, and along complexity gradients. Thus, Context-Dependent Scaling (CDS) of feeding interactions could represent an unrecognised aspect of food webs, and quantifying the extent of CDS might enhance predictive ecology.

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Barrios-O’Neill, D., Kelly, R., Dick, J. T. A., Ricciardi, A., Macisaac, H. J., & Emmerson, M. C. (2016, June 1). On the context-dependent scaling of consumer feeding rates. Ecology Letters. Blackwell Publishing Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.12605

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