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Temperature and nutrients drive eco-phenotypic dynamics in a microbial food web

Ze‐Yi Han, Daniel J. Wieczynski, Andrea Yammine, Jean P. Gibert

2023Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Anthropogenic increases in temperature and nutrient loads will likely impact food web structure and stability. Although their independent effects have been reasonably well studied, their joint effects-particularly on coupled ecological and phenotypic dynamics-remain poorly understood. Here we experimentally manipulated temperature and nutrient levels in microbial food webs and used time-series analysis to quantify the strength of reciprocal effects between ecological and phenotypic dynamics across trophic levels. We found that (1) joint-often interactive-effects of temperature and nutrients on ecological dynamics are more common at higher trophic levels, (2) temperature and nutrients interact to shift the relative strength of top-down versus bottom-up control, and (3) rapid phenotypic change mediates observed ecological responses to changes in temperature and nutrients. Our results uncover how feedback between ecological and phenotypic dynamics mediate food web responses to environmental change. This suggests important but previously unknown ways that temperature and nutrients might jointly control the rapid eco-phenotypic feedback that determine food web dynamics in a changing world.

Topics & Concepts

Trophic levelFood webNutrientEcologyBiologyPhenotypic plasticityPhenotypeEnvironmental scienceBiochemistryGenePlant and animal studiesEvolution and Genetic DynamicsInsect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior
Temperature and nutrients drive eco-phenotypic dynamics in a microbial food web | Litcius