Asynchronous food-web pathways could buffer the response of Serengeti predators to El Niño Southern Oscillation

A. R.E. Sinclair, Kristine L. Metzger, John M. Fryxell, Craig Packer, Andrea E. Byrom, Meggan E. Craft, Katie Hampson, Tiziana Lembo, Sarah M. Durant, Guy J. Forrester, John Bukombe, John McHetto, Jan Dempewolf, Ray Hilborn, Sarah Cleaveland, Ally Nkwabi, Anna Mosser, Simon A.R. Mduma

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

30 Scopus citations

Abstract

Understanding how entire ecosystems maintain stability in the face of climatic and human disturbance is one of the most fundamental challenges in ecology. Theory suggests that a crucial factor determining the degree of ecosystem stability is simply the degree of synchrony with which different species in ecological food webs respond to environmental stochasticity. Ecosystems in which all food-web pathways are affected similarly by external disturbance should amplify variability in top carnivore abundance over time due to population interactions, whereas ecosystems in which a large fraction of pathways are nonresponsive or even inversely responsive to external disturbance will have more constant levels of abundance at upper trophic levels. To test the mechanism underlying this hypothesis, we used over half a century of demographic data for multiple species in the Serengeti (Tanzania) ecosystem to measure the degree of synchrony to variation imposed by an external environmental driver, the El Niñ o Southern Oscillation (ENSO). ENSO effects were mediated largely via changes in dry-season vs. wet-season rainfall and consequent changes in vegetation availability, propagating via bottom-up effects to higher levels of the Serengeti food web to influence herbivores, predators and parasites. Some species in the Serengeti food web responded to the influence of ENSO in opposite ways, whereas other species were insensitive to variation in ENSO. Although far from conclusive, our results suggest that a diffuse mixture of herbivore responses could help buffer top carnivores, such as Serengeti lions, from variability in climate. Future global climate changes that favor some pathways over others, however, could alter the effectiveness of such processes in the future.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1123-1130
Number of pages8
JournalEcology
Volume94
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2013

Keywords

  • Demography
  • ENSO
  • Ecosystem stability
  • El Niño Southern Oscillation
  • Environmental stochasticity
  • Rainfall
  • Recruitment
  • SOI
  • Serengeti food web
  • Southern Oscillation Index
  • Trophic interaction

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