Cascading top‐down effects of changing oceanic predator abundances
Dalhousie University · Scripps Institution of Oceanography · +1 more institution
Abstract
1. Top-down control can be an important determinant of ecosystem structure and function, but in oceanic ecosystems, where cascading effects of predator depletions, recoveries, and invasions could be significant, such effects had rarely been demonstrated until recently. 2. Here we synthesize the evidence for oceanic top-down control that has emerged over the last decade, focusing on large, high trophic-level predators inhabiting continental shelves, seas, and the open ocean. 3. In these ecosystems, where controlled manipulations are largely infeasible, 'pseudo-experimental' analyses of predator-prey interactions that treat independent predator populations as 'replicates', and temporal or spatial contrasts in…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 32.44
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 134
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Mesopredator release hypothesis
- Predator
- Trophic level
- Predation
- Apex predator
- Trophic cascade
- Biology
- Ecology
- Life below water