Metabolic plasticity drives mismatches in physiological traits between prey and predator

Author:

Affinito FlavioORCID,Kordas Rebecca L.,Matias Miguel G.ORCID,Pawar SamraatORCID

Abstract

AbstractMetabolic rate, the rate of energy use, underpins key ecological traits of organisms, from development and locomotion to interaction rates between individuals. In a warming world, the temperature-dependence of metabolic rate is anticipated to shift predator-prey dynamics. Yet, there is little real-world evidence on the effects of warming on trophic interactions. We measured the respiration rates of aquatic larvae of three insect species from populations experiencing a natural temperature gradient in a large-scale mesocosm experiment. Using a mechanistic model we predicted the effects of warming on these taxa’s predator-prey interaction rates. We found that species-specific differences in metabolic plasticity lead to mismatches in the temperature-dependence of their relative velocities, resulting in altered predator-prey interaction rates. This study underscores the role of metabolic plasticity at the species level in modifying trophic interactions and proposes a mechanistic modelling approach that allows an efficient, high-throughput estimation of climate change threats across species pairs.

Funder

Royal Society

Imperial College London

Ministry of Education and Science | Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia

EC | Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Reference103 articles.

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