Trophic Cascades in Complex Food Webs
- Leo Ledru,
- Jean-François Arnoldi,
- Arnaud Sentis,
- Victor Frossard
Abstract
Theoretical predictions regarding trophic cascades, the positive
indirect effect of a predator on a resource, are challenged by empirical
observations reporting variations in their signs and magnitude. A
limitation is that theory focuses on simple food chains while those are
embedded into complex food webs in nature. Using simulated and empirical
food webs, we generalize the concept of trophic cascade to whole food
webs where longer-order indirect effects trickling across multiple
species can influence trophic cascade patterns. We find that indirect
effects generate divergences from the classic trophic cascade scheme,
leading to a diversity of cascade behavior. Divergences occur both in
trophic chains embedded within food webs, but also when species are
aggregated into trophic levels. From this perspective, the classic
cascade is a specific case occurring only when longer-order indirect
effects are negligible. Indirect pathways could be prevalent on the
dynamic of species in food web exhibiting collective behavior.