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Human-Induced Trophic Cascades along the Fecal Detritus Pathway

Human presence and activity in tropical forest is thought to exert top-down regulation over the various ‘green-world’ pathways of plant-based foodwebs. However, these effects have never been explored for the ‘brown-world’ pathways of fecal-detritus webs. The strong effects of humans on tropical game...

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Autores principales: Nichols, Elizabeth, Uriarte, María, Peres, Carlos A., Louzada, Julio, Braga, Rodrigo Fagundes, Schiffler, Gustavo, Endo, Whaldener, Spector, Sacha H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3797778/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24146780
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075819
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author Nichols, Elizabeth
Uriarte, María
Peres, Carlos A.
Louzada, Julio
Braga, Rodrigo Fagundes
Schiffler, Gustavo
Endo, Whaldener
Spector, Sacha H.
author_facet Nichols, Elizabeth
Uriarte, María
Peres, Carlos A.
Louzada, Julio
Braga, Rodrigo Fagundes
Schiffler, Gustavo
Endo, Whaldener
Spector, Sacha H.
author_sort Nichols, Elizabeth
collection PubMed
description Human presence and activity in tropical forest is thought to exert top-down regulation over the various ‘green-world’ pathways of plant-based foodwebs. However, these effects have never been explored for the ‘brown-world’ pathways of fecal-detritus webs. The strong effects of humans on tropical game mammals are likely to indirectly influence fecal detritivores (including Scarabaeine dung beetles), with subsequent indirect impacts on detrivore-mediated and plant-facilitating detrital processes. Across a 380-km gradient of human influence in the western Brazilian Amazon, we conducted the first landscape-level assessment of human-induced cascade effects on the fecal detritus pathway, by coupling data on human impact, game mammal and detritivore community structure, and rate measurements of a key detritus process (i.e. dung beetle-mediated secondary seed dispersal). We found evidence that human impact indirectly influences both the diversity and biomass of fecal detritivores, but not detritivore-mediated processes. Cascade strength varied across detritivore groups defined by species' traits. We found smaller-bodied dung beetles were at higher risk of local decline in areas of human presence, and that body size was a better predictor of cascade structure than fecal resource manipulation strategy. Cascade strength was also stronger in upland, unflooded forests, than in seasonally flooded forests. Our results suggest that the impact of human activity in tropical forest on fecal-detritus food web structure is mediated by both species' traits and habitat type. Further research will be required to determine the conditions under which these cascade effects influence fecal-detritus web function.
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spelling pubmed-37977782013-10-21 Human-Induced Trophic Cascades along the Fecal Detritus Pathway Nichols, Elizabeth Uriarte, María Peres, Carlos A. Louzada, Julio Braga, Rodrigo Fagundes Schiffler, Gustavo Endo, Whaldener Spector, Sacha H. PLoS One Research Article Human presence and activity in tropical forest is thought to exert top-down regulation over the various ‘green-world’ pathways of plant-based foodwebs. However, these effects have never been explored for the ‘brown-world’ pathways of fecal-detritus webs. The strong effects of humans on tropical game mammals are likely to indirectly influence fecal detritivores (including Scarabaeine dung beetles), with subsequent indirect impacts on detrivore-mediated and plant-facilitating detrital processes. Across a 380-km gradient of human influence in the western Brazilian Amazon, we conducted the first landscape-level assessment of human-induced cascade effects on the fecal detritus pathway, by coupling data on human impact, game mammal and detritivore community structure, and rate measurements of a key detritus process (i.e. dung beetle-mediated secondary seed dispersal). We found evidence that human impact indirectly influences both the diversity and biomass of fecal detritivores, but not detritivore-mediated processes. Cascade strength varied across detritivore groups defined by species' traits. We found smaller-bodied dung beetles were at higher risk of local decline in areas of human presence, and that body size was a better predictor of cascade structure than fecal resource manipulation strategy. Cascade strength was also stronger in upland, unflooded forests, than in seasonally flooded forests. Our results suggest that the impact of human activity in tropical forest on fecal-detritus food web structure is mediated by both species' traits and habitat type. Further research will be required to determine the conditions under which these cascade effects influence fecal-detritus web function. Public Library of Science 2013-10-16 /pmc/articles/PMC3797778/ /pubmed/24146780 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075819 Text en © 2013 Nichols et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Nichols, Elizabeth
Uriarte, María
Peres, Carlos A.
Louzada, Julio
Braga, Rodrigo Fagundes
Schiffler, Gustavo
Endo, Whaldener
Spector, Sacha H.
Human-Induced Trophic Cascades along the Fecal Detritus Pathway
title Human-Induced Trophic Cascades along the Fecal Detritus Pathway
title_full Human-Induced Trophic Cascades along the Fecal Detritus Pathway
title_fullStr Human-Induced Trophic Cascades along the Fecal Detritus Pathway
title_full_unstemmed Human-Induced Trophic Cascades along the Fecal Detritus Pathway
title_short Human-Induced Trophic Cascades along the Fecal Detritus Pathway
title_sort human-induced trophic cascades along the fecal detritus pathway
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3797778/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24146780
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075819
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