Arthropod food webs in the foreland of a retreating Greenland glacier:
Integrating molecular gut content analysis with Structural Equation
Modelling
- Ejgil Gravesen,
- Lenka Dušátková,
- Kacie Athey,
- Jiayi Qin,
- Paul Henning Krogh
Abstract
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The Arctic has warmed nearly four times faster than the global average
since 1979, resulting in rapid glacier retreat and exposing new glacier
forelands. These forelands offer unique experimental settings to explore
how global warming impacts ecosystems, particularly for highly
cli-mate-sensitive arthropods. Understanding these impacts can help
anticipate future biodiversity and ecosystem changes under ongoing
warming scenarios. In this study, we integrate data on arthropod
diversity from DNA gut content analysis—offering insight into predator
diets—with quantitative measures of arthropod activity-density at a
Greenland glacier foreland using Structural Equation Modelling (SEM).
Our SEM analysis reveals both bottom-up and top-down controlled food
chains. Bottom-up control, linked to sit-and-wait predator behavior, was
prominent for spider and harvestman populations, while top-down control,
associated with active search behavior, was key for ground beetle
populations. Bottom-up controlled dynamics predominated during the early
stages of vegetation succession, while top-down mechanisms dominated in
later successional stages further from the glacier, driven largely by
increasing temperatures. In advanced successional stages, top-down
cascades intensify intraguild predation (IGP) among arthropod predators.
This is especially evident in the linyphiid spider Collinsia
holmgreni, whose diet included other linyphiid and lycosid spiders,
reflecting high IGP. The IGP ratio in C. holmgreni negatively
correlated with the activity-density of ground-dwelling prey, likely
con-tributing to the local decline and possible extinction of this
cold-adapted species in warmer, late-succession habitats where lycosid
spiders dominate. These findings suggest that sustained warming and
associated shifts in food web dynamics could lead to the loss of
cold-adapted species, while brief warm events may temporarily impact
populations without lasting extinction effects.08 Nov 2024Submitted to Ecology and Evolution 11 Nov 2024Submission Checks Completed
11 Nov 2024Assigned to Editor
12 Nov 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
18 Nov 2024Editorial Decision: Accept