捕食
食草动物
生态学
生物
捕食者
营养级联
限制
营养水平
无脊椎动物
生态系统
机械工程
工程类
作者
John Terborgh,Lawrence Lopez,Percy Núñez,Madhu Rao,Ghazala Shahabuddin,Gabriela Orihuela,Mailen Riveros,Rafael Ascanio,Greg H. Adler,Thomas D. Lambert,Luis Balbas
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)]
日期:2001-11-30
卷期号:294 (5548): 1923-1926
被引量:1397
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.1064397
摘要
The manner in which terrestrial ecosystems are regulated is controversial. The “top-down” school holds that predators limit herbivores and thereby prevent them from overexploiting vegetation. “Bottom-up” proponents stress the role of plant chemical defenses in limiting plant depredation by herbivores. A set of predator-free islands created by a hydroelectric impoundment in Venezuela allows a test of these competing world views. Limited area restricts the fauna of small (0.25 to 0.9 hectare) islands to predators of invertebrates (birds, lizards, anurans, and spiders), seed predators (rodents), and herbivores (howler monkeys, iguanas, and leaf-cutter ants). Predators of vertebrates are absent, and densities of rodents, howler monkeys, iguanas, and leaf-cutter ants are 10 to 100 times greater than on the nearby mainland, suggesting that predators normally limit their populations. The densities of seedlings and saplings of canopy trees are severely reduced on herbivore-affected islands, providing evidence of a trophic cascade unleashed in the absence of top-down regulation.
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