What is it about?
The more diverse a predator assemblage is, the greater its capacity to find, access, and frighten its prey. As a result, scared herbivorous prey species spend more time in a state of heightened vigilance, which often means that less plant biomass gets eaten. From the plants' perspective, they enjoy having scary predators nearby because the plants get a break from herbivory. technically speaking, predator diversity, itself, generates significant non-consumptive impacts within a food-web, and these non-lethal impacts can 'cascade down' the food-chain, affecting the plants at the base of the food-web.
Featured Image
Why is it important?
Globally, biodiversity losses continue to re-shape communities, and these impacts may operate through lethal and non-lethal pathways. Often, the effects of non-lethal, or non-consumptive, interactions exhibit greater frequencies and magnitudes within ecosystems (than consumptive effects). Given the biodiversity crisis, an acknowledgment of the idea that changes in predator diversity may re-shape herbivore behavior, as well as plant biomass accrual, is vital to predictions of how biodiversity loss may affect ecosystem functioning.
Perspectives
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Cascading diversity effects transmitted exclusively by behavioral interactions, Ecology, August 2010, Wiley,
DOI: 10.1890/09-0787.1.
You can read the full text:
Contributors
The following have contributed to this page