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Mesopredator release moderates trophic control of plant biomass in a Georgia salt marsh.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Morton, JP; Hensel, MJS; DeLaMater, DS; Angelini, C; Atkins, RL; Prince, KD; Williams, SL; Boyd, AD; Parsons, J; Resetarits, EJ; Smith, CS ...
Published in: Ecology
December 2024

Predators regulate communities through top-down control in many ecosystems. Because most studies of top-down control last less than a year and focus on only a subset of the community, they may miss predator effects that manifest at longer timescales or across whole food webs. In southeastern US salt marshes, short-term and small-scale experiments indicate that nektonic predators (e.g., blue crab, fish, terrapins) facilitate the foundational grass, Spartina alterniflora, by consuming herbivorous snails and crabs. To test both how nekton affect marsh processes when the entire animal community is present, and how prior results scale over time, we conducted a 3-year nekton exclusion experiment in a Georgia salt marsh using replicated 19.6 m2 plots. Our nekton exclusions increased densities of plant-grazing snails and juvenile deposit-feeding fiddler crab and, in Year 2, reduced predation on tethered juvenile snails, indicating that nektonic predators control these key macroinvertebrates. However, in Year 3, densities of mesopredatory benthic mud crabs increased threefold in nekton exclusions, erasing the tethered snails' predation refuge. Nekton exclusion had no effect on Spartina biomass, likely because the observed mesopredator release suppressed grazing snail densities and elevated densities of fiddler crabs, whose burrowing alleviates soil stresses. Structural equation modeling supported the hypotheses that nektonic predators and mesopredators control invertebrate communities, with nektonic predators having stronger total effects on Spartina than mud crabs by controlling densities of species that both suppress (grazers) and facilitate (fiddler crabs) plant growth. These findings highlight that salt marshes can be resilient to multiyear reductions in nektonic predators if mesopredators are present and that multiple pathways of trophic control manifest in different ways over time to mediate community dynamics. These results highlight that larger scale and longer-term experiments can illuminate community dynamics not previously understood, even in well-studied ecosystems such as salt marshes.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Ecology

DOI

EISSN

1939-9170

ISSN

1939-9170

Publication Date

December 2024

Volume

105

Issue

12

Start / End Page

e4452

Related Subject Headings

  • Wetlands
  • Snails
  • Predatory Behavior
  • Georgia
  • Food Chain
  • Ecology
  • Brachyura
  • Biomass
  • Animals
  • 4102 Ecological applications
 

Citation

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Morton, J. P., Hensel, M. J. S., DeLaMater, D. S., Angelini, C., Atkins, R. L., Prince, K. D., … Silliman, B. R. (2024). Mesopredator release moderates trophic control of plant biomass in a Georgia salt marsh. Ecology, 105(12), e4452. https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.4452
Morton, Joseph P., Marc J. S. Hensel, David S. DeLaMater, Christine Angelini, Rebecca L. Atkins, Kimberly D. Prince, Sydney L. Williams, et al. “Mesopredator release moderates trophic control of plant biomass in a Georgia salt marsh.Ecology 105, no. 12 (December 2024): e4452. https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.4452.
Morton JP, Hensel MJS, DeLaMater DS, Angelini C, Atkins RL, Prince KD, et al. Mesopredator release moderates trophic control of plant biomass in a Georgia salt marsh. Ecology. 2024 Dec;105(12):e4452.
Morton, Joseph P., et al. “Mesopredator release moderates trophic control of plant biomass in a Georgia salt marsh.Ecology, vol. 105, no. 12, Dec. 2024, p. e4452. Epmc, doi:10.1002/ecy.4452.
Morton JP, Hensel MJS, DeLaMater DS, Angelini C, Atkins RL, Prince KD, Williams SL, Boyd AD, Parsons J, Resetarits EJ, Smith CS, Valdez S, Monnet E, Farhan R, Mobilian C, Renzi J, Smith D, Craft C, Byers JE, Alber M, Pennings SC, Silliman BR. Mesopredator release moderates trophic control of plant biomass in a Georgia salt marsh. Ecology. 2024 Dec;105(12):e4452.
Journal cover image

Published In

Ecology

DOI

EISSN

1939-9170

ISSN

1939-9170

Publication Date

December 2024

Volume

105

Issue

12

Start / End Page

e4452

Related Subject Headings

  • Wetlands
  • Snails
  • Predatory Behavior
  • Georgia
  • Food Chain
  • Ecology
  • Brachyura
  • Biomass
  • Animals
  • 4102 Ecological applications