Handling- or digestion-limited predators: the role of body mass and habitat complexity in predator functional response

Author:

Hu N,Huang Y1,Yu Z23,Zhang T456,Liu D1,Lee M7

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Mariculture, Ministry of Education, Ocean University of China, 5 Yushan Road, Qingdao 266003, Shandong, PR China

2. Key Laboratory of Coastal Zone Environmental Processes and Ecological Remediation, Yantai Institute of Coastal Zone Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Yantai 264003, PR China

3. Research and Development Center for Efficient Utilization of Coastal Bioresources, Yantai Institute of Coastal Zone Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Yantai 264003, PR China

4. CAS Key Laboratory of Marine Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Qingdao 266071, Shandong, PR China

5. Laboratory for Marine Ecology and Environmental Science, Qingdao Pilot National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology, Qingdao 266237, PR China

6. Center for Ocean Mega-Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Qingdao 266071, PR China

7. Aquatic Ecology, Department of Biology, Lund University, Lund 223 63, Sweden

Abstract

The predator functional response quantifies the per capita feeding rate of predators as a function of prey density and is a key element of feeding interactions. Variations in its parameters are strongly associated with interaction strength and population dynamics. We examined 18 functional responses within marine whelk-bivalve systems, varying predator body size, prey species, and habitat structure. Our findings suggest that the marine whelk Rapana venosa is handling-limited, a predator type that has received less attention in previous research. We propose further categorizing handling-limited predators into 2 types: pursuit-limited (where maximum feeding rate could be influenced by habitat complexity) and ingestion-limited (where maximum feeding rate is impacted not by habitat complexity, but by predator-prey body mass ratios and prey defense strategy). We found that handling time scales negatively with predator-prey body mass ratios, but this trend exhibits layers of complexity. We propose that the transition from handling to digestion limitation with increasing predator-prey body mass ratios underlies this trend. Our study also confirms the importance of prey types, in addition to known effects of body mass ratios and habitat structure. In summary, our study reveals that simple assumptions about body masses and prey defense strategy may usefully refine estimates of feeding interactions in complex food webs.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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