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Trophic cascades are powerful indirect interactions that can control entire ecosystems, occurring when a trophic level in a food web is suppressed. For example, a top-down cascade will occur if predators are effective enough in predation to reduce the abundance, or alter the behavior of their prey, thereby releasing the next lower trophic level from predation (or herbivory if the intermediate trophic level is a herbivore).

The trophic cascade is an ecological concept which has stimulated new research in many areas of ecology. For example, it can be important for understanding the knock-on effects of removing top predators from food webs, as humans have done in many places through hunting and fishing.

A top-down cascade is a trophic cascade where the top consumer/predator controls the primary consumer population. In turn, the primary producer population thrives. The removal of the top predator can alter the food web dynamics. In this case, the primary consumers would overpopulate and exploit the primary producers. Eventually there would not be enough primary producers to sustain the consumer population. Top-down food web stability depends on competition and predation in the higher trophic levels. Invasive species can also alter this cascade by removing or becoming a top predator. This interaction may not always be negative. Studies have shown that certain invasive species have begun to shift cascades; and as a consequence, ecosystem degradation has been repaired.[1][2]

For example, if the abundance of large piscivorous fish is increased in a lake, the abundance of their prey, smaller fish that eat zooplankton, should decrease. The resulting increase in zooplankton should, in turn, cause the biomass of its prey, phytoplankton, to decrease.

In a bottom-up cascade, the population of primary producers will always control the increase/decrease of the energy in the higher trophic levels. Primary producers are plants and phytoplankton that require photosynthesis. Although light is important, primary producer populations are altered by the amount of nutrients in the system. This food web relies on the availability and limitation of resources. All populations will experience growth if there is initially a large amount of nutrients.[3][4]

In a subsidy cascade, species populations at one trophic level can be supplemented by external food. For example, native animals can forage on resources that don't originate in their same habitat, such as native predators eating livestock. This may increase their local abundances thereby affecting other species in the ecosystem and causing an ecological cascade. For example, Luskin et al. (2017) found that native animals living in protected primary rainforest in Malaysia found food subsidies in neighboring oil palm plantations.[5] This subsidy allowed native animal populations to increase, which then triggered powerful secondary ‘cascading’ effects on forest tree community. Specifically, crop-raiding wild boar (Sus scrofa) built thousands of nests from the forest understory vegetation and this caused a 62% decline in forest tree sapling density over a 24-year study period. Such cross-boundary subsidy cascades may be widespread in both terrestrial and marine ecosystems and present significant conservation challenges.

These trophic interactions shape patterns of biodiversity globally. Humans and climate change have affected these cascades drastically. One example can be seen with sea otters (Enhydra lutris) on the Pacific coast of the United States of America. Over time, human interactions caused a removal of sea otters. One of their main prey, the Pacific purple sea urchin (Strongylocentrotus purpuratus) eventually began to overpopulate. The overpopulation caused increased predation of giant kelp (Macrocystis pyrifera). As a result, there was extreme deterioration of the kelp forests along the California coast. This is why it is important for countries to regulate marine and terrestrial ecosystems.[6][7]

Predator-induced interactions could heavily influence the flux of atmospheric carbon if managed on a global scale. For example, a study was conducted to determine the cost of potential stored carbon in living kelp biomass in sea otter (Enhydra lutris) enhanced ecosystems. The study valued the potential storage between $205 million and $408 million dollars (US) on the European Carbon Exchange (2012).[8]

  1. ^ Kotta, J.; Wernberg, T.; Jänes, H.; Kotta, I.; Nurkse, K.; Pärnoja, M.; Orav-Kotta, H. (2018). "Novel crab predator causes marine ecosystem regime shift". Scientific Reports. 8 (1): 4956. Bibcode:2018NatSR...8.4956K. doi:10.1038/s41598-018-23282-w. PMC 5897427. PMID 29651152.
  2. ^ Megrey, Bernard and Werner, Francisco. "Evaluating the Role of Topdown vs. Bottom-up Ecosystem Regulation from a Modeling Perspective" (PDF).{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Matsuzaki, Shin-Ichiro S.; Suzuki, Kenta; Kadoya, Taku; Nakagawa, Megumi; Takamura, Noriko (2018). "Bottom-up linkages between primary production, zooplankton, and fish in a shallow, hypereutrophic lake". Ecology. 99 (9): 2025–2036. doi:10.1002/ecy.2414. PMID 29884987. S2CID 46996957.
  4. ^ Lynam, Christopher Philip; Llope, Marcos; Möllmann, Christian; Helaouët, Pierre; Bayliss-Brown, Georgia Anne; Stenseth, Nils C. (Feb 2017). "Trophic and environmental control in the North Sea". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 114 (8): 1952–1957. doi:10.1073/pnas.1621037114. PMC 5338359. PMID 28167770.
  5. ^ Luskin, M. (2017). "Cross-boundary subsidy cascades from oil palm degrade distant tropical forests". Nature Communications. 8 (8): 2231. Bibcode:2017NatCo...8.2231L. doi:10.1038/s41467-017-01920-7. PMC 5738359. PMID 29263381.
  6. ^ Zhang, J.; Qian, H.; Girardello, M.; Pellissier, V.; Nielsen, S. E.; Svenning, J.-C. (2018). "Trophic interactions among vertebrate guilds and plants shape global patterns in species diversity". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 285 (1883): 20180949. doi:10.1098/rspb.2018.0949. PMC 6083253. PMID 30051871.
  7. ^ "University of Kentucky Lecture Notes".
  8. ^ Wilmers, C. C.; Estes, J. A.; Edwards, M.; Laidre, K. L.; Konar, B. (2012). "Do trophic cascades affect the storage and flux of atmospheric carbon? An analysis of sea otters and kelp forests". Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment. 10 (8): 409–415. doi:10.1890/110176. ISSN 1540-9309. S2CID 51684842.

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