نتایج جستجو برای: trophic levels

تعداد نتایج: 930571  

2017
Fen Yang Shaowen Xie Jinxin Liu Chaoyang Wei

Arsenic (As) is a ubiquitous but carcinogenic metalloid element. Shimen realgar mine has the largest As mine in Asia with a mining history of 1500 years, therefore it could induce substantial increase of arsenic concentration in the environment and living organisms, and ultimately into human bodies. The total As in surface soil, sediments and water were in the range of 35-5000 mg/kg, 43-4543 mg...

2010
Jana S. Petermann Christine B. Müller Christiane Roscher Alexandra Weigelt Wolfgang W. Weisser Bernhard Schmid

The consequences of plant species loss are rarely assessed in a multi-trophic context and especially effects on life-history traits of organisms at higher trophic levels have remained largely unstudied. We used a grassland biodiversity experiment and measured the effects of two components of plant diversity, plant species richness and the presence of nitrogen-fixing legumes, on several life-his...

2015
Selina Våge T. Frede Thingstad

Trophic interactions are highly complex and modern sequencing techniques reveal enormous biodiversity across multiple scales in marine microbial communities. Within the chemically and physically relatively homogeneous pelagic environment, this calls for an explanation beyond spatial and temporal heterogeneity. Based on observations of simple parasite-host and predator-prey interactions occurrin...

2006
J. Emmett Duffy

Biodiversity at multiple levels — genotypes within species, species within functional groups, habitats within a landscape — enhances productivity, resource use, and stability of seagrass ecosystems. Several themes emerge from a review of the mostly indirect evidence and the few experiments that explicitly manipulated diversity in seagrass systems. First, because many seagrass communities are do...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1999
L A Dyer D K Letourneau

To test for direct and indirect effects of a top predator on three lower trophic levels, we conducted two multiyear predator addition experiments in a tropical wet forest. Periodic additions of a top predator (predatory clerid beetle) to a wet forest understory shrub caused a reduction in the predatory beetle's prey (a predatory ant), increased herbivory, and reduced leaf area of the plant. The...

2018
Susan R. Kennedy Todd E. Dawson Rosemary G. Gillespie

The Hawaiian Islands offer a unique opportunity to test how changes in the properties of an isolated ecosystem are propagated through the organisms that occur within that ecosystem. The age-structured arrangement of volcanic-derived substrates follows a regular progression over space and, by inference, time. We test how well documented successional changes in soil chemistry and associated veget...

Journal: :Ecotoxicology 2014
Rebecca Hylton Keller Lingtian Xie David B Buchwalter Kathleen E Franzreb Theodore R Simons

Mercury contamination in wildlife has rarely been studied in the Southern Appalachians despite high deposition rates in the region. From 2006 to 2008 we sampled feathers from 458 birds representing 32 species in the Southern Appalachians for total mercury and stable isotope δ (15)N. Mercury concentrations (mean ± SE) averaged 0.46 ± 0.02 μg g(-1) (range 0.01-3.74 μg g(-1)). Twelve of 32 species...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2010
John M Davis Amy D Rosemond Susan L Eggert Wyatt F Cross J Bruce Wallace

Increased nutrient mobilization by human activities represents one of the greatest threats to global ecosystems, but its effects on ecosystem productivity can differ depending on food web structure. When this structure facilitates efficient energy transfers to higher trophic levels, evidence from previous large-scale enrichments suggests that nutrients can stimulate the production of multiple t...

2012
Tim S. Jessop Peter Smissen Franciscus Scheelings Tim Dempster

Humans are increasingly subsidizing and altering natural food webs via changes to nutrient cycling and productivity. Where human trophic subsidies are concentrated and persistent within natural environments, their consumption could have complex consequences for wild animals through altering habitat preferences, phenotypes and fitness attributes that influence population dynamics. Human trophic ...

2014
Carlotta Molfese Doug Beare Jason M. Hall-Spencer

The worldwide depletion of major fish stocks through intensive industrial fishing is thought to have profoundly altered the trophic structure of marine ecosystems. Here we assess changes in the trophic structure of the English Channel marine ecosystem using a 90-year time-series (1920-2010) of commercial fishery landings. Our analysis was based on estimates of the mean trophic level (mTL) of an...

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