Tropical and temperate differences in the trophic structure and aquatic prey use of riparian predators

Ecol Lett. 2023 Dec;26(12):2122-2134. doi: 10.1111/ele.14322. Epub 2023 Oct 9.

Abstract

The influence of aquatic resource-inputs on terrestrial communities is poorly understood, particularly in the tropics. We used stable isotope analysis of carbon and nitrogen to trace aquatic prey use and quantify the impact on trophic structure in 240 riparian arthropod communities in tropical and temperate forests. Riparian predators consumed more aquatic prey and were more trophically diverse in the tropics than temperate regions, indicating tropical riparian communities are both more reliant on and impacted by aquatic resources than temperate communities. This suggests they are more vulnerable to disruption of aquatic-terrestrial linkages. Although aquatic resource use declined strongly with distance from water, we observed no correlated change in trophic structure, suggesting trophic flexibility to changing resource availability within riparian predator communities in both tropical and temperate regions. Our findings highlight the importance of aquatic resources for riparian communities, especially in the tropics, but suggest distance from water is less important than resource diversity in maintaining terrestrial trophic structure.

Keywords: aquatic-terrestrial linkages; cross-ecosystem subsidies; isotopic mixing models; predator communities; riparian buffers; spiders; stable isotope analysis; trophic structure; tropical temperate comparison.

Publication types

  • Letter

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Arthropods*
  • Carbon
  • Ecosystem
  • Food Chain*
  • Forests
  • Water

Substances

  • Carbon
  • Water