Variation in body size drives spatial and temporal variation in
lobster-urchin interaction strength
Abstract
Size-scaling relationships generated across huge variation in body mass
from zooplankton to elephants offer critical insight into understanding
similarities in species interactions across ecosystems. Yet to what
extent ecologists can borrow from these relationships to effectively
predict interactions between a single species pair remains poorly
understood. Here, we combine experiments and long-term data to test how
accurately published size-scaling relationships predict interactions
between an economically and ecologically important predator-prey pair.
We demonstrate that interaction strength is highly dependent on predator
size, prey size, and prey density. We then used this relationship to
predict plausible interaction strengths across ten years of data at five
sites. Our analysis reveals that variation in body size accounts for up
to 91% of the variation in interaction strength compared to density.
However, predictions generated from even the closest size-scaling
relationship from the literature underestimated the strength of
interactions by a factor of 4.