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Nonlinear scale dependence and spatiotemporal variability in planktonic food webs
Auteur(s)
Carney Heath J.
Havens Karl E.
Bersier, Louis-Félix
Date de parution
1997
In
Oikos, Wiley, 1997/79/2/230-240
Résumé
Zooplankton food webs of Lake Okeechobee, Florida, were analyzed in order to examine spatiotemporal variability and test for scale dependence of major food web properties. 46 webs were constructed from data collected during several years (1988-92) at six locations. For all these webs, the following food web properties were calculated: number of species, total links, links per species, connectance, percentage of top and intermediate species, and food chain length. We did not find any statistically significant spatiotemporal variation in these properties. Still, there were consistent differences seasonally (summer vs winter) and spatially (littoral vs pelagic habitats). There was also a very clear nonlinear scale dependence in most food web properties: links per species, food chain length, and proportions of top and intermediate species vs number of species. The scale dependence was strong for small webs, but became weaker for larger webs. The relatively simple food webs and consistently collected data used in our study provide some of the clearest and most statistically significant results to date. They help reconcile the debate about scale invariance vs dependence in major food web properties.
Identifiants
Type de publication
journal article
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