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Predator control of marine communities increases with temperature across 115 degrees of latitude

Authors :
Gail V. Ashton
Amy L. Freestone
J. Emmett Duffy
Mark E. Torchin
Brent J. Sewall
Brianna Tracy
Mariano Albano
Andrew H. Altieri
Luciana Altvater
Rolando Bastida-Zavala
Alejandro Bortolus
Antonio Brante
Viviana Bravo
Norah Brown
Alejandro H. Buschmann
Edward Buskey
Rosita Calderón Barrera
Brian Cheng
Rachel Collin
Ricardo Coutinho
Luis De Gracia
Gustavo M. Dias
Claudio DiBacco
Augusto A. V. Flores
Maria Angélica Haddad
Zvi Hoffman
Bruno Ibañez Erquiaga
Dean Janiak
Analí Jiménez Campeán
Inti Keith
Jean-Charles Leclerc
Orlando Pedro Lecompte-Pérez
Guilherme Ortigara Longo
Helena Matthews-Cascon
Cynthia H. McKenzie
Jessica Miller
Martín Munizaga
Lais P. D. Naval-Xavier
Sergio A. Navarrete
Carlos Otálora
Lilian A. Palomino-Alvarez
Maria Gabriela Palomo
Chris Patrick
Cormack Pegau
Sandra V. Pereda
Rosana M. Rocha
Carlos Rumbold
Carlos Sánchez
Adolfo Sanjuan-Muñoz
Carmen Schlöder
Evangelina Schwindt
Janina Seemann
Alan Shanks
Nuno Simoes
Luis Skinner
Nancy Yolimar Suárez-Mozo
Martin Thiel
Nelson Valdivia
Ximena Velez-Zuazo
Edson A. Vieira
Bruno Vildoso
Ingo S. Wehrtmann
Matt Whalen
Lynn Wilbur
Gregory M. Ruiz
Source :
Repositório Institucional da USP (Biblioteca Digital da Produção Intelectual), Universidade de São Paulo (USP), instacron:USP
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Early naturalists suggested that predation intensity increases toward the tropics, affecting fundamental ecological and evolutionary processes by latitude, but empirical support is still limited. Several studies have measured consumption rates across latitude at large scales, with variable results. Moreover, how predation affects prey community composition at such geographic scales remains unknown. Using standardized experiments that spanned 115° of latitude, at 36 nearshore sites along both coasts of the Americas, we found that marine predators have both higher consumption rates and consistently stronger impacts on biomass and species composition of marine invertebrate communities in warmer tropical waters, likely owing to fish predators. Our results provide robust support for a temperature-dependent gradient in interaction strength and have potential implications for how marine ecosystems will respond to ocean warming.

Details

ISSN :
10959203
Volume :
376
Issue :
6598
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science (New York, N.Y.)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....949451f6eb157867b20da90ce90e3056