生物扩散
生物
栖息地
生态学
捕食
捕食者
人口
社会学
人口学
作者
Shannon J. McCauley,Locke Rowe
出处
期刊:Biology Letters
[Royal Society]
日期:2010-02-17
卷期号:6 (4): 449-452
被引量:50
标识
DOI:10.1098/rsbl.2009.1082
摘要
Dispersal is a central process determining community structure in heterogeneous landscapes, and species interactions within habitats may be a major determinant of dispersal. Although the effects of species interactions on dispersal within habitats have been well studied, how species interactions affect the movement of individuals between habitats in a landscape has received less attention. We conducted two experiments to assess the extent to which predation risk affects dispersal from an aquatic habitat by a flight-capable semi-aquatic insect ( Notonecta undulata ). Exposure to non-lethal (caged) fish fed conspecifics increased dispersal rates in N. undulata . Moreover, dispersal rate was positively correlated with the level of risk imposed by the fish; the greater the number of notonectids consumed by the caged fish, the greater the dispersal rate from the habitat. These results suggest that risk within a habitat can affect dispersal among habitats in a landscape and thus affect community structure on a much greater scale than the direct effect of predation itself.
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