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BODY SIZES OF CONSUMERS AND THEIR RESOURCES
- Source :
- Ecology. 86:2545-2545
- Publication Year :
- 2005
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 2005.
-
Abstract
- Trophic information—who eats whom—and species' body sizes are two of the most basic descriptions necessary to understand community structure as well as ecological and evolutionary dynamics. Consumer–resource body size ratios between predators and their prey, and parasitoids and their hosts, have recently gained increasing attention due to their important implications for species' interaction strengths and dynamical population stability. This data set documents body sizes of consumers and their resources. We gathered body size data for the food webs of Skipwith Pond, a parasitoid community of grass-feeding chalcid wasps in British grasslands; the pelagic community of the Benguela system, a source web based on broom in the United Kingdom; Broadstone Stream, UK; the Grand Caricaie marsh at Lake Neuchtel, Switzerland; Tuesday Lake, USA; alpine lakes in the Sierra Nevada of California; Mill Stream, UK; and the eastern Weddell Sea Shelf, Antarctica. Further consumer–resource body size data are included for planktonic predators, predatory nematodes, parasitoids, marine fish predators, freshwater invertebrates, Australian terrestrial consumers, and aphid parasitoids. Containing 16 807 records, this is the largest data set ever compiled for body sizes of consumers and their resources. In addition to body sizes, the data set includes information on consumer and resource taxonomy, the geographic location of the study, the habitat studied, the type of the feeding interaction (e.g., predacious, parasitic) and the metabolic categories of the species (e.g., invertebrate, ectotherm vertebrate). The present data set was gathered with the intent to stimulate research on effects of consumer–resource body size patterns on food-web structure, interaction-strength distributions, population dynamics, and community stability. The use of a common data set may facilitate cross-study comparisons and understanding of the relationships between different scientific approaches and models.
- Subjects :
- 0106 biological sciences
2. Zero hunger
education.field_of_study
Ecology
010604 marine biology & hydrobiology
Population
Community structure
Pelagic zone
Biology
010603 evolutionary biology
01 natural sciences
Predation
Habitat
Ectotherm
14. Life underwater
education
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Trophic level
Invertebrate
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00129658
- Volume :
- 86
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Ecology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........8895b67c80312896a42e90b9ce8dab08
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1890/05-0379