The combined effects of biotic and abiotic stress on species richness and connectance.

Food web structure and species richness are both subject to biotic (e.g. predation pressure and resource limitation) and abiotic stress (e.g. environmental change). We investigated the combined effects of both types of stress on richness and connectance, and on their relationship, in a predator-prey...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Devdutt Kulkarni, Frederik De Laender
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5383007?pdf=render
id doaj-b62166a8b04c42cbb6853688c1b65330
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b62166a8b04c42cbb6853688c1b653302020-11-25T02:47:26ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01123e017282810.1371/journal.pone.0172828The combined effects of biotic and abiotic stress on species richness and connectance.Devdutt KulkarniFrederik De LaenderFood web structure and species richness are both subject to biotic (e.g. predation pressure and resource limitation) and abiotic stress (e.g. environmental change). We investigated the combined effects of both types of stress on richness and connectance, and on their relationship, in a predator-prey system. To this end, we developed a mathematical two trophic level food-web model to investigate the effects of biotic and abiotic stress on food web connectance and species richness. We found negative effects of top-down and bottom-up control on prey and predator richness, respectively. Effects of top-down and bottom-up control were stronger when initial connectance was high and low, respectively. Bottom-up control could either aggravate or buffer negative effects of top-down control. Abiotic stress affecting predator richness had positive indirect effects on prey richness, but only when initial connectance was low. However, no indirect effects on predator richness were observed following direct effects on prey richness. Top-down and bottom-up control selected for weakly connected prey and highly connected predators, thereby decreasing and increasing connectance, respectively. Our simulations suggest a broad range of negative and positive richness-connectance relationships, thereby revisiting the often found negative relationship between richness and connectance in food webs. Our results suggest that (1) initial food-web connectance strongly influences the effects of biotic stress on richness and the occurrence of indirect effects on richness; and (2) the shape of the richness-connectance relationship depends on the type of biotic stress.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5383007?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Devdutt Kulkarni
Frederik De Laender
spellingShingle Devdutt Kulkarni
Frederik De Laender
The combined effects of biotic and abiotic stress on species richness and connectance.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Devdutt Kulkarni
Frederik De Laender
author_sort Devdutt Kulkarni
title The combined effects of biotic and abiotic stress on species richness and connectance.
title_short The combined effects of biotic and abiotic stress on species richness and connectance.
title_full The combined effects of biotic and abiotic stress on species richness and connectance.
title_fullStr The combined effects of biotic and abiotic stress on species richness and connectance.
title_full_unstemmed The combined effects of biotic and abiotic stress on species richness and connectance.
title_sort combined effects of biotic and abiotic stress on species richness and connectance.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Food web structure and species richness are both subject to biotic (e.g. predation pressure and resource limitation) and abiotic stress (e.g. environmental change). We investigated the combined effects of both types of stress on richness and connectance, and on their relationship, in a predator-prey system. To this end, we developed a mathematical two trophic level food-web model to investigate the effects of biotic and abiotic stress on food web connectance and species richness. We found negative effects of top-down and bottom-up control on prey and predator richness, respectively. Effects of top-down and bottom-up control were stronger when initial connectance was high and low, respectively. Bottom-up control could either aggravate or buffer negative effects of top-down control. Abiotic stress affecting predator richness had positive indirect effects on prey richness, but only when initial connectance was low. However, no indirect effects on predator richness were observed following direct effects on prey richness. Top-down and bottom-up control selected for weakly connected prey and highly connected predators, thereby decreasing and increasing connectance, respectively. Our simulations suggest a broad range of negative and positive richness-connectance relationships, thereby revisiting the often found negative relationship between richness and connectance in food webs. Our results suggest that (1) initial food-web connectance strongly influences the effects of biotic stress on richness and the occurrence of indirect effects on richness; and (2) the shape of the richness-connectance relationship depends on the type of biotic stress.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5383007?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT devduttkulkarni thecombinedeffectsofbioticandabioticstressonspeciesrichnessandconnectance
AT frederikdelaender thecombinedeffectsofbioticandabioticstressonspeciesrichnessandconnectance
AT devduttkulkarni combinedeffectsofbioticandabioticstressonspeciesrichnessandconnectance
AT frederikdelaender combinedeffectsofbioticandabioticstressonspeciesrichnessandconnectance
_version_ 1724753501429432320