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Pattern of seasonal variation in rates of predation between spider families is temporally stable in a food web with widespread intraguild predation

Intraguild predation (IGP)–predation between generalist predators (IGPredator and IGPrey) that potentially compete for a shared prey resource–is a common interaction module in terrestrial food webs. Understanding temporal variation in webs with widespread IGP is relevant to testing food web theory....

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Autores principales: Wise, David H., Mores, Robin M., M. Pajda-De La O, Jennifer, McCary, Matthew A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10615273/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37903108
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0293176
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author Wise, David H.
Mores, Robin M.
M. Pajda-De La O, Jennifer
McCary, Matthew A.
author_facet Wise, David H.
Mores, Robin M.
M. Pajda-De La O, Jennifer
McCary, Matthew A.
author_sort Wise, David H.
collection PubMed
description Intraguild predation (IGP)–predation between generalist predators (IGPredator and IGPrey) that potentially compete for a shared prey resource–is a common interaction module in terrestrial food webs. Understanding temporal variation in webs with widespread IGP is relevant to testing food web theory. We investigated temporal constancy in the structure of such a system: the spider-focused food web of the forest floor. Multiplex PCR was used to detect prey DNA in 3,300 adult spiders collected from the floor of a deciduous forest during spring, summer, and fall over four years. Because only spiders were defined as consumers, the web was tripartite, with 11 consumer nodes (spider families) and 22 resource nodes: 11 non-spider arthropod taxa (order- or family-level) and the 11 spider families. Most (99%) spider-spider predation was on spider IGPrey, and ~90% of these interactions were restricted to spider families within the same broadly defined foraging mode (cursorial or web-spinning spiders). Bootstrapped-derived confidence intervals (BCI’s) for two indices of web structure, restricted connectance and interaction evenness, overlapped broadly across years and seasons. A third index, % IGPrey (% IGPrey among all prey of spiders), was similar across years (~50%) but varied seasonally, with a summer rate (65%) ~1.8x higher than spring and fall. This seasonal pattern was consistent across years. Our results suggest that extensive spider predation on spider IGPrey that exhibits consistent seasonal variation in frequency, and that occurs primarily within two broadly defined spider-spider interaction pathways, must be incorporated into models of the dynamics of forest-floor food webs.
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spelling pubmed-106152732023-10-31 Pattern of seasonal variation in rates of predation between spider families is temporally stable in a food web with widespread intraguild predation Wise, David H. Mores, Robin M. M. Pajda-De La O, Jennifer McCary, Matthew A. PLoS One Research Article Intraguild predation (IGP)–predation between generalist predators (IGPredator and IGPrey) that potentially compete for a shared prey resource–is a common interaction module in terrestrial food webs. Understanding temporal variation in webs with widespread IGP is relevant to testing food web theory. We investigated temporal constancy in the structure of such a system: the spider-focused food web of the forest floor. Multiplex PCR was used to detect prey DNA in 3,300 adult spiders collected from the floor of a deciduous forest during spring, summer, and fall over four years. Because only spiders were defined as consumers, the web was tripartite, with 11 consumer nodes (spider families) and 22 resource nodes: 11 non-spider arthropod taxa (order- or family-level) and the 11 spider families. Most (99%) spider-spider predation was on spider IGPrey, and ~90% of these interactions were restricted to spider families within the same broadly defined foraging mode (cursorial or web-spinning spiders). Bootstrapped-derived confidence intervals (BCI’s) for two indices of web structure, restricted connectance and interaction evenness, overlapped broadly across years and seasons. A third index, % IGPrey (% IGPrey among all prey of spiders), was similar across years (~50%) but varied seasonally, with a summer rate (65%) ~1.8x higher than spring and fall. This seasonal pattern was consistent across years. Our results suggest that extensive spider predation on spider IGPrey that exhibits consistent seasonal variation in frequency, and that occurs primarily within two broadly defined spider-spider interaction pathways, must be incorporated into models of the dynamics of forest-floor food webs. Public Library of Science 2023-10-30 /pmc/articles/PMC10615273/ /pubmed/37903108 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0293176 Text en © 2023 Wise et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wise, David H.
Mores, Robin M.
M. Pajda-De La O, Jennifer
McCary, Matthew A.
Pattern of seasonal variation in rates of predation between spider families is temporally stable in a food web with widespread intraguild predation
title Pattern of seasonal variation in rates of predation between spider families is temporally stable in a food web with widespread intraguild predation
title_full Pattern of seasonal variation in rates of predation between spider families is temporally stable in a food web with widespread intraguild predation
title_fullStr Pattern of seasonal variation in rates of predation between spider families is temporally stable in a food web with widespread intraguild predation
title_full_unstemmed Pattern of seasonal variation in rates of predation between spider families is temporally stable in a food web with widespread intraguild predation
title_short Pattern of seasonal variation in rates of predation between spider families is temporally stable in a food web with widespread intraguild predation
title_sort pattern of seasonal variation in rates of predation between spider families is temporally stable in a food web with widespread intraguild predation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10615273/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37903108
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0293176
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