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Opposite latitudinal patterns for bird and arthropod predation revealed in experiments with differently colored artificial prey

Authors :
Elena L. Zvereva
Bastien Castagneyrol
Tatiana Cornelissen
Anders Forsman
Juan Antonio Hernández‐Agüero
Tero Klemola
Lucas Paolucci
Vicente Polo
Norma Salinas
Kasselman Jurie Theron
Guorui Xu
Vitali Zverev
Mikhail V. Kozlov
Source :
Ecology and Evolution, Vol 9, Iss 24, Pp 14273-14285 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

Abstract The strength of biotic interactions is generally thought to increase toward the equator, but support for this hypothesis is contradictory. We explored whether predator attacks on artificial prey of eight different colors vary among climates and whether this variation affects the detection of latitudinal patterns in predation. Bird attack rates negatively correlated with model luminance in cold and temperate environments, but not in tropical environments. Bird predation on black and on white (extremes in luminance) models demonstrated different latitudinal patterns, presumably due to differences in prey conspicuousness between habitats with different light regimes. When attacks on models of all colors were combined, arthropod predation decreased, whereas bird predation increased with increasing latitude. We conclude that selection for prey coloration may vary geographically and according to predator identity, and that the importance of different predators may show contrasting patterns, thus weakening the overall latitudinal trend in top‐down control of herbivorous insects.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20457758
Volume :
9
Issue :
24
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Ecology and Evolution
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.383f39a688144f6988629cb098e9df7a
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5862