Habitat traits and predation interact to drive abundance and body size patterns in associated fauna

Author:

Stelling‐Wood Talia P.12ORCID,Poore Alistair G. B.12,Hughes A. Randall3,Everett Jason D.24,Gribben Paul E.25

Affiliation:

1. Evolution & Ecology Research Centre UNSW Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. Centre of Marine Science and Innovation UNSW Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

3. Marine Science Center Northeastern University Nahant Massachusetts USA

4. School of Mathematics and Physics The University of Queensland St Lucia Queensland Australia

5. Sydney Institute of Marine Science Mosman New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractHabitat‐forming organisms provide three‐dimensional structure that supports abundant and diverse communities. Variation in the morphological traits of habitat formers will therefore likely influence how they facilitate associated communities, either via food and habitat provisioning, or by altering predator–prey interactions. These mechanisms, however, are typically studied in isolation, and thus, we know little of how they interact to affect associated communities. In response to this, we used naturally occurring morphological variability in the alga Sargassum vestitum to create habitat units of distinct morphotypes to test whether variation in the morphological traits (frond size and thallus size) of S. vestitum or the interaction between these traits affects their value as habitat for associated communities in the presence and absence of predation. We found morphological traits did not interact, instead having independent effects on epifauna that were negligible in the absence of predation. However, when predators were present, habitat units with large fronds were found to host significantly lower epifaunal abundances than other morphotypes, suggesting that large frond alga provided low‐value refuge from predators. The presence of predators also influenced the size structure of epifaunal communities from habitat units of differing frond size, suggesting that the refuge value of S. vestitum was also related to epifauna body size. This suggests that habitat formers may chiefly structure associated communities by mediating size‐selective predation, and not through habitat provisioning. Furthermore, these results also highlight that habitat traits cannot be considered in isolation, for their interaction with biotic processes can have significant implications for associated communities.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Center for Selective C-H Functionalization, National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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