Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology University of South Dakota Vermillion SD USA
2. Department F.‐A. Forel for Environmental and Aquatic Sciences University of Geneva Geneva Switzerland
3. Department of Biology Juniata College Huntingdon PA USA
Abstract
AbstractAimCommunities contain more individuals of small species and fewer individuals of large species. According to the ‘metabolic theory of ecology’, the relationship of log mean abundance with log mean body size across communities should exhibit a slope of −3/4 that is invariant across environmental conditions. Here, we investigate whether this slope is indeed invariant or changes systematically across gradients in temperature, resource availability and predation pressure.Location1048 lakes across the USA.Time Period2012.Major Taxa StudiedPhytoplankton.ResultsWe found that the size–abundance relationship across all sampled phytoplankton communities was significantly lower than −3/4 and near −1 overall. More importantly, we found strong evidence that the environment affects the slope: it varies between −0.33 and −0.93 across interacting gradients of temperature, resource (phosphorus) supply and zooplankton predation pressure. Therefore, phytoplankton communities have orders of magnitude more small or large cells depending on environmental conditions across geographical locations.ConclusionOur results emphasise the importance of the environmental factors' effect on macroecological patterns that arise through physiological and ecological processes. An investigation of the mechanisms underlying the link between individual energetics constrain and macroecological patterns would allow to predict how global warming and changes in nutrients will alter large‐scale ecological patterns in the future.
Funder
Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung
National Science Foundation
Subject
Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Global and Planetary Change
Cited by
3 articles.
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