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GARY A. POLIS INTRAGUILD PREDATION Presented by: Maria Vozzo, BIOL 7083 April 16, 2013

Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

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Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation. Presented by: Maria Vozzo, BIOL 7083 April 16, 2013. Mini-Biography. Education: Ph.D., Biology, UC-Riverside, 1977 M.A., UC-Riverside, 1975 Loyola University, 1969 Professor of Ecology at University of California – Davis 1998-2000 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

GARY A. POLISINTRAGUILD PREDATION

Presented by: Maria Vozzo, BIOL 7083April 16, 2013

Page 2: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Mini-Biography Education:

Ph.D., Biology, UC-Riverside, 1977 M.A., UC-Riverside, 1975 Loyola University, 1969

Professor of Ecology at University of California – Davis 1998-2000

Vanderbilt University 1979-1998 Oregon State University 1977-1979 Drowned in a boating accident in the Sea of

Cortez while on a field expedition in 2000

Gary Allan Polis, 1946-2000

www.news.ucdavis.edu

Page 3: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Field Studies“The evidence argues that actual community food webs are extraordinarily more complex than those webs cataloged by theorists. I argue that most cataloged webs are over simplified caricatures of actual communities…that they poorly represent real biological communities. Consequently, the practice of abstracting empirical regularities from such catalogs yields an inaccurate and artifactual view of trophic interactions within communities. Contrary to strong assertions by many theorists, patterns from food webs of real communities generally do not support predictions arising from dynamic and graphic models of food-web structure.”

Polis 1991

Page 4: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Research Interests Scorpions, spiders, desert communities Food web complexity Trophic Cascades Intraguild Predation (IGP)

“The killing and eating of prey species by a predator that also can utilize the resources of those prey”

Competition and predation by species in the system

Polis et al., 1989

Page 5: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Research Interests Scorpions, spiders, desert communities Food web complexity Trophic Cascades Intraguild Predation (IGP)

“The killing and eating of prey species by a predator that also can utilize the resources of those prey”

Competition and predation by species in the system

Polis et al. 1989

Page 6: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Key papersPolis, G. A., C. A. Myers and R. D. Holt. 1989. The ecology and evolution of intraguild predation: Potential competitors that eat each other. Annual review of ecology and systematics 20: 297-330.Cited by 1118

Polis, G. A. and R. D. Holt. 1992. Intraguild predation: The dynamics of complex trophic interactions. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 7: 151-154. Cited by 489

Holt, R. D. and G. A. Polis. 1997. A theoretical framework for intraguild predation. The American Naturalist 149: 745-764. Cited by 530

Page 7: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Key Concepts Omnivory: consuming resources from

more than one trophic level

Competition vs. Predation Competition theory: Resource use,

coexistence, exclusion, and alternative stable states among species

Predation theory: How predators and prey persist, predator impacts on prey, oscillations among populations

Polis and Holt 1992

Page 8: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Shared Resource

(Basal prey)

Intra

guild

Pr

edat

ion

Polis et al. 1989

Page 9: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Intermediate Predator

(Intraguild or IG Prey)

Shared Resource

(Basal prey)

Intra

guild

Pr

edat

ion

Polis et al. 1989

Page 10: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Top Predator (Intraguild or IG Predator)

Intermediate Predator

(Intraguild or IG Prey)

Shared Resource

(Basal prey)

Intra

guild

Pr

edat

ion

Polis et al. 1989

Page 11: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Top Predator (Intraguild or IG Predator)

Intermediate Predator

(Intraguild or IG Prey)

Shared Resource

(Basal prey)

Intra

guild

Pr

edat

ion

Polis et al. 1989

Page 12: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Top Predator (Intraguild or IG Predator)

Intermediate Predator

(Intraguild or IG Prey)

Shared Resource

(Basal prey)

PredationIn

tragu

ild

Pred

atio

n

Polis et al. 1989

Page 13: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Top Predator (Intraguild or IG Predator)

Intermediate Predator

(Intraguild or IG Prey)

Shared Resource

(Basal prey)

Predation

Competition

Intra

guild

Pr

edat

ion

Polis et al. 1989

Page 14: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Intraguild Predation

Polis and Holt 1992

Page 15: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Intraguild Predation

Polis and Holt 1992

Predators, Consumers & Resource (no

IGP)

Page 16: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Intraguild Predation

Polis and Holt 1992

Predators, Consumers & Resource (no

IGP)

IGP

Page 17: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Theory

Holt and Polis 1997

Symbol Definitiona’ Functional response of IG predator to resourceα Functional response of IG predator to IG preya Functional response of IG prey to resourcem, m’ Density dependent mortality ratesb, b’ Resource consumption IG prey and IG predator

reproductionβ IG predator benefit from consuming IG prey

Page 18: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Without IGPIsocline of predator (species A)Isocline of prey (species B)

Polis et al. 1989

No IGP - A excludes B; IGP enhances A

No IGP - priority effect; IGP - dominance by A

No IGP – B excludes A; IGP – priority effect

No IGP - B excludes A; IGP - coexistence

Competitors coexist with no IGP; IGP A and B

Page 19: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Must species B be a superior competitor in order to exist in IGP?

Without IGPIsocline of predator (species A)Isocline of prey (species B)

Polis et al. 1989

No IGP - A excludes B; IGP enhances A

No IGP - priority effect; IGP - dominance by A

No IGP – B excludes A; IGP – priority effect

No IGP - B excludes A; IGP - coexistence

Competitors coexist with no IGP; IGP A and B

Page 20: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

IGP is ubiquitous in nature

Polis et al. 1989

Page 21: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

IGP is ubiquitous in nature

Polis et al. 1989

Page 22: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Community Ecology Implications of IGP

Community structure Exclusion, coexistence, alternative stable

states (Polis et al. 1988, Holt and Polis 1997) Resource use

Superior competitors (Polis et al. 1989) Direct vs. Indirect effects (Polis and Holt 1992)

Exclude or decrease resources Alter behavioral interactions

Trophic cascades (Polis and Holt 1992) Predation impacts lower trophic levels

Page 23: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Legacy of IGP: Trophic Cascades

Addition of top predator, suppresses larvae, indirectly benefiting aphids.

Top predator addition can suppress herbivore population

Rosenheim et al. 1993

+ -

Page 24: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Legacy of IGP: Indirect and Direct Effects

Wissinger and McGrady 1993

Page 25: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Legacy of IGP: Indirect and Direct Effects

IG predator presence (Tramea) reduced feeding of IG prey (Erythemis) Indirect effect (behavior) Direct effect (consumption) Wissinger and McGrady

1993

Page 26: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Legacy of IGP How is IGP influenced by other factors

such as habitat structure and complexity?

Janssen et al. 2007

Page 27: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Legacy of IGP: Community Structure, Resource Use, Trophic Cascades, and Indirect & Direct Effects

Research Questions: How does intraguild predation

and habitat structure affect species interactions on an oyster reef? Sheepshead Mud crab-bivalve interaction Resource survival

Consumption or indirect effects?

Page 28: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Oyster Reef Communities Drastic declines in oyster populations

85% loss worldwide

Oyster reefs provide vital habitat to many speciesCommon Oyster Reef

Residents

SC DNR

Beck et al. 2011

Page 29: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Intraguild Predation

Sheepshead (Archosargus probatocephalus)

Mud crabsMussels

(Geukensia demissa)

SC DNR

sms.si.edu

Top Predator

Intermediate Predator

Basal Prey

(Panopeus herbstii)

Predator-Prey

Interactions

Trophic Cascades

Holt and Polis 1997, Janssen et al. 2007

Page 30: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

IGP and Oyster reef complexity

Sheepshead

Mud crabs

Mussels

SC DNR

sms.si.edu

Top Predator

Intermediate

Predator

Basal Prey

+

Low Structure Reef

-

-

-+

High Structure Reef

Sheepshead Mu

d crabs

Mussels

SC DNR

sms.si.edu

Top Predator

Intermediate

Predator

Basal Prey

+ +-

-

-

behavioral effectconsumptive effectindirect effects

Vozzo et al. 2012, presentation

Page 31: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

IGP and Community Ecology Community structure Resource use Direct vs. Indirect effects Trophic cascades

“…intraguild predation is a ubiquitous and often powerful interaction central to the

structure and functioning of many natural communities; closer attention to it will

enrich our understanding of population and community ecology.” Polis et al.

1989

Page 32: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Questions?

Click icon to add picture

Thank you!

Page 33: Gary A. Polis Intraguild predation

Citations

Click icon to add pictureBeck, M. W. et al. 2011. Oyster reefs at risk and recommendations for conservation, restoration, and management. BioScience 61: 107-116. Grawbowski, J. 2004. Habitat complexity disrupts predator-prey interactions but not the trophic cascade on oyster reefs. Ecology 85: 995-1004. Janssen, A. et al. 2007. Habitat structure affects intraguild predation. Ecology 88: 2713-2719. Holt, R. D. and G. A. Polis. 1997. A theoretical framework for intraguild predation. The American Naturalist 149: 745-764. Polis, G. A. 1991. Complex-trophic interactions in deserts: an empirical critique of food-web theory. The American Naturalist 138: 123-155. Polis, G. A., C. A. Myers and R. D. Holt. 1989. The ecology and evolution of intraguild predation: Potential competitors that eat each other. Annual review of ecology and systematics 20: 297-330.Polis, G. A. and R. D. Holt. 1992. Intraguild predation: The dynamics of complex trophic interactions. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 7: 151-154. Rosenheim, J. A., L. R. Wilhoit and C. A. Armer. 1993. Influence of intraguild predation among generalist insect predators on the suppression of an herbivore population. Oecologia 96:439-449. Saxon, Wolfgang. “Gary Allan Polis, 53, an Expert On Scorpions and Desert Ecology”. The New York Times. 01 April 2000. 20 February 2013. < http://www.nytimes.com/2000/04/01/us/gary-allan-polis-53-an-expert-on-scorpions-and-desert-ecology.html>. Wissinger, S. and J. McGrady. 1993. Intraguild predation and competition between larval dragonflies: direct and indirect effects on shared prey. Ecology 74:207-218.