营养水平
生物
捕食
捕食者
生态学
生态位
同位素分析
利基
顶级掠食者
食物网
生态系统
人口
食物链
栖息地
人口学
社会学
作者
Andrey G. Zuev,Kerstin Heidemann,Vladislav D. Leonov,Ina Schaefer,Stefan Scheu,Andrei V. Tanasevitch,Alexei V. Tiunov,Sergey M. Tsurikov,Anton Potapov
摘要
Generalistic interactions between predator and prey may vary with ecosystem type, predator traits, and prey traits, but the interplay of these factors has not been assessed in ground food webs. We investigated trophic interactions of ground‐dwelling spiders across eight forests in European Russia associated with body size, hunting strategy, microhabitat specialization, potential prey type, potential prey population density, and forest type (coniferous vs. broadleaved). We analyzed 128 individual spiders, including juveniles, all identified to the family level with two complementary methods: molecular gut content analysis, and stable isotope analysis of carbon and nitrogen. The results suggest that feeding frequency of spiders is affected by predator body size and by selection of certain prey type. Stable isotope analysis showed similar trophic niches among spider families, varying moderately with forest type. Larger spiders had higher Δ 13 C values than smaller ones, but similar Δ 15 N values, suggesting that different size classes of spiders belong to different food chains. Results based on stable isotope and molecular gut content analyses were weakly linked, indicating them targeting different trophic niche dimensions. At least for the group‐level interactions, family identity and hunting strategy of predator has little predictive power while predator body size and prey traits affected trophic niche dimensions calling for future studies in this direction. Large spiders feed more and rely on different basal resources than small spiders, suggesting that including small species and juveniles provides a more comprehensive picture of food web organization.
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