Warming increases the top-down effects and metabolism of a subtidal herbivore

PeerJ. 2013 Jul 25:1:e109. doi: 10.7717/peerj.109. Print 2013.

Abstract

Ecological theory and experiments indicate that warming can increase the relative strength of top-down effects via alterations to metabolic rates in several different systems, thereby resulting in decreased plant biomass at higher temperatures. However, the general influence of increased environmental temperature on top-down effects is not well understood in systems where organisms experience relatively large variation in temperature. Rapid ocean temperature changes are pervasive throughout the Galápagos Islands due to upwelling and downwelling of internal waves, ENSO events and seasonality. We measured the effect of large, but not uncommon, water temperature variation on the metabolism and grazing rate of a common subtidal herbivore and on photosynthesis of their algal prey in the Galápagos Islands in July 2012. We found that green urchin consumption and metabolism were greater at the higher temperature treatment (28°C), resulting in significantly less algal biomass. Our result that warming increased green urchin metabolic rates, even in a highly dynamic system, provides further support for a mechanistic link between environmental temperature and feeding rates. And further, our findings suggest individual response to temperature results in changes in top-down effects. And if this response is maintained over longer-time scales of days to weeks, this could translate to alterations of larger-scale ecological patterns, such as primary producer community composition and structure.

Keywords: Algae; Galápagos; Herbivore; Lytechinus; Metabolic theory of ecology; Temperature; Ulva; Urchin.

Grants and funding

This work was funded by the Phycological Society of America, Sigma Xi Grants-in-Aid of Research, and the Wilson Memorial Fund. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.