TY - JOUR
T1 - Resource pulses, switching trophic control, and the dynamics of small mammal assemblages in arid Australia
AU - Letnic, Mike
AU - Story, Paul
AU - Story, Georgeanna
AU - Field, Judith
AU - Brown, Oliver
AU - Dickman, Christopher R.
PY - 2011/12
Y1 - 2011/12
N2 - Small mammal assemblages in the aridlands of the Southern Hemisphere often have wildly fluctuating dynamics. Previous studies have attributed these fluctuations to climate-driven pulses in food resources resulting in the switching of trophic control from bottom-up (food-limited) to top-down (predation-limited) population regulation, and vice versa. In this study we use a meta-analytic approach to evaluate the evidence for the phenomenon of switching trophic control. If shifting trophic control is a unifying phenomenon that shapes small mammal assemblages in arid Australia, we would expect the abundance and species richness of small mammals to increase with increasing primary productivity and the abundance of small mammals to decrease with increasing predator abundances, which lag behind those of small mammals. We tested these predictions using data compiled from 6 unpublished and 2 published data sets containing time series (311 years) of small mammal and predator community dynamics. Our analyses provide moderate support for the notion that switching trophic control is a unifying phenomenon shaping small mammal assemblages. Also, our results provide evidence that top-down and bottom-up control are not mutually exclusive phenomena driving desert small mammal assemblages but rather alternative ecosystem states that exist along a rainfall-driven continuum of ecosystem energy flux through time.
AB - Small mammal assemblages in the aridlands of the Southern Hemisphere often have wildly fluctuating dynamics. Previous studies have attributed these fluctuations to climate-driven pulses in food resources resulting in the switching of trophic control from bottom-up (food-limited) to top-down (predation-limited) population regulation, and vice versa. In this study we use a meta-analytic approach to evaluate the evidence for the phenomenon of switching trophic control. If shifting trophic control is a unifying phenomenon that shapes small mammal assemblages in arid Australia, we would expect the abundance and species richness of small mammals to increase with increasing primary productivity and the abundance of small mammals to decrease with increasing predator abundances, which lag behind those of small mammals. We tested these predictions using data compiled from 6 unpublished and 2 published data sets containing time series (311 years) of small mammal and predator community dynamics. Our analyses provide moderate support for the notion that switching trophic control is a unifying phenomenon shaping small mammal assemblages. Also, our results provide evidence that top-down and bottom-up control are not mutually exclusive phenomena driving desert small mammal assemblages but rather alternative ecosystem states that exist along a rainfall-driven continuum of ecosystem energy flux through time.
KW - El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO)
KW - alternative stable states
KW - bottom-up versus top-down control
KW - climatic oscillations
KW - predation
KW - resource pulse
KW - small mammal
KW - trophic cascade
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=83755168103&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1644/10-MAMM-S-229.1
DO - 10.1644/10-MAMM-S-229.1
M3 - Article
SN - 0022-2372
VL - 92
SP - 1210
EP - 1222
JO - Journal of Mammalogy
JF - Journal of Mammalogy
IS - 6
ER -