Grazer behaviour can regulate large-scale patterning of community states

Ecol Lett. 2021 Sep;24(9):1917-1929. doi: 10.1111/ele.13828. Epub 2021 Jul 4.

Abstract

Ecosystem patterning can arise from environmental heterogeneity, biological feedbacks that produce multiple persistent ecological states, or their interaction. One source of feedbacks is density-dependent changes in behaviour that regulate species interactions. By fitting state-space models to large-scale (~500 km) surveys on temperate rocky reefs, we find that behavioural feedbacks best explain why kelp and urchin barrens form either reef-wide patches or local mosaics. Best-supported models in California include feedbacks where starvation intensifies grazing across entire reefs create reef-scale, alternatively stable kelp- and urchin-dominated states (32% of reefs). Best-fitting models in New Zealand include the feedback of urchins avoiding dense kelp stands that can increase abrasion and predation risk, which drives a transition from shallower urchin-dominated to deeper kelp-dominated zones, with patchiness at 3-8 m depths with intermediate wave stress. Connecting locally studied processes with region-wide data, we highlight how behaviour can explain community patterning and why some systems exhibit community-wide alternative stable states.

Keywords: alternative stable states; behaviour; dynamical models; kelp forests; spatial patterning.

Publication types

  • Letter

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Ecosystem*
  • Food Chain
  • Kelp*
  • New Zealand
  • Sea Urchins