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Background: Variability in the ecological impacts of invasive species across their geographical ranges may decrease the accuracy of risk assessments. Comparative functional response analysis can be used to estimate invasive consumer-resource dynamics, explain impact variability, and thus potentially inform impact predictions. The European green crab () has been introduced on multiple continents beyond its native range, although its ecological impacts appear to vary among populations and regions. Our aim was to test whether consumer-resource dynamics under standardized conditions are similarly variable across the current geographic distribution of green crab, and to identify correlated morphological features.
Methods: Crabs were collected from multiple populations within both native (Northern Ireland) and invasive regions (South Africa and Canada). Their functional responses to local mussels ( spp.) were tested. Attack rates and handling times were compared among green crab populations within each region, and among regions (Pacific Canada, Atlantic Canada, South Africa, and Northern Ireland). The effect of predator and prey morphology on prey consumption was investigated.
Results: Across regions, green crabs consumed prey according to a Type II (hyperbolic) functional response curve. Attack rates (i.e., the rate at which a predator finds and attacks prey), handling times and maximum feeding rates differed among regions. There was a trend toward higher attack rates in invasive than in native populations. Green crabs from Canada had lower handling times and thus higher maximum feeding rates than those from South Africa and Northern Ireland. Canadian and Northern Ireland crabs had significantly larger claws than South African crabs. Claw size was a more important predictor of the proportion of mussels killed than prey shell strength.
Discussion: The differences in functional response between regions reflect observed impacts of green crabs in the wild. This suggests that an understanding of consumer-resource dynamics (e.g., the measure of predation), derived from simple, standardized experiments, might yield useful predictions of invader impacts across geographical ranges.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5634 | DOI Listing |
PNAS Nexus
September 2025
School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, 1122 NE Boat St, Box 355020, Seattle, WA 98105, USA.
Animal populations often display coherent temporal fluctuations in their abundance, with far-ranging implications for species persistence and ecosystem stability. The key mechanisms driving spatial population synchrony include organismal dispersal, spatially correlated environmental dynamics (Moran effect) and concordant consumer-resource dynamics. Disentangling these mechanisms, however, is notoriously difficult in natural systems, and the extent to which the biotic environment (intensity and types of biotic interactions) mediates metapopulation dynamics remains a largely unanswered question.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Environ Res
August 2025
Universidade Estadual do Norte Fluminense Darcy Ribeiro, Laboratório de Ciências Ambientais, Avenida Alberto Lamego, Campos Dos Goytacazes, 2000, Brazil; Instituto do Mar, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Santos, São Paulo, Brazil. Electronic address:
Sandy beaches are harsh environments where local physical conditions strongly drive ecological patterns. Ecological interactions are often overlooked in population dynamics studies, although the seemingly homogeneous nature of ocean beaches might support predation as a relevant ecological force. This study uses Lotka-Volterra models (LVMs) to assess whether populations of surface-active predators and prey on sandy beaches in southeastern Brazil are regulated by consumer-resource dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFISME J
August 2025
Department of Ecology and Evolution, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
Microbial communities experience environmental fluctuations across timescales from rapid changes in moisture, temperature, or light levels to long-term seasonal or climactic variations. Understanding how microbial populations respond to these changes is critical for predicting the impact of perturbations, interventions, and climate change on communities. Because communities typically harbor tens to hundreds of distinct taxa, the response of microbial abundances to perturbations is potentially complex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Math Biol
August 2025
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, and Department of Biology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, K1N6N5, Canada.
In order to be useful in assessing the effects of climate change on biological populations, mathematical models have to adequately represent the life cycle of the species in question, the dynamics of and interactions with its resource(s), and the effect of changing environmental conditions on their vital rates. Due to this complexity, such models are often analytically intractable. We present here a consumer-resource model that captures seasonality (summer and winter), with synchronously reproducing consumers (birth pulse), structured into non-reproductive juveniles and reproductive adults, and that remains analytically tractable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMath Biosci
September 2025
School of Mathematics and Physics, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan, Hubei 430074, PR China; Center for Mathematical Sciences, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan, Hubei 430074, PR China. Electronic address:
We investigate a reaction-diffusion-advection mussel-algae model with nonlinear boundary conditions, motivated by population dynamics in flowing aquatic environments. The system exhibits complex threshold behavior governed by energy conversion efficiency, flow velocity, and boundary-mediated losses. We establish conditions for global existence, boundedness, and characterize semi-trivial and coexistence steady states.
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