Biotic connectivity between ecosystems can provide major transport of organic matter and nutrients, influencing ecosystem structure and productivity1, yet the implications are poorly understood owing to human disruptions of natural flows2. When abundant, seabirds feeding in the open ocean transport large quantities of nutrients onto islands, enhancing the productivity of island fauna and flora3,4. Whether leaching of these nutrients back into the sea influences the productivity, structure and functioning of adjacent coral reef ecosystems is not known. Here we address this question using a rare natural experiment in the Chagos Archipelago, in which some islands are rat-infested and others are rat-free. We found that seabird densities and nit...
Seabird colonies can have significant effects on island trophic structure by infusing massive amount...
Seabirds redistribute nutrients between different ecosystem compartments and over vast geographical ...
Inputs of inorganic nutnents in 1992 from seabirds (white-capped noddy and wedgetail shearwater, ma...
Biotic connectivity between ecosystems can provide major transport of organic matter and nutrients, ...
Biological invasions pose a threat to nearly every ecosystem worldwide.1,2 Although eradication prog...
Cross-ecosystem nutrient subsidies play a key role in the structure and dynamics of recipient commun...
Islands house a majority of the world’s biodiversity and are thus critical for biodiversity conserv...
The biosphere is composed of a mosaic of ecosystems that are connected to one another through biolog...
Global climate change threatens tropical coral reefs, yet local management can influenc...
Abstract By improving resource quality, cross-ecosystem nutrient subsidies may boost demographic rat...
On many Pacific and Indian Ocean islands, colonization by humans brought invasive species, native ve...
Burrowing seabirds that nest on islands transfer nutrients from the sea, disturb the soil through bu...
Invasive species are widespread and can have devastating effects on biota, especially insular biota...
Seabirds on islands create a circular seabird economy - whereby they feed in the ocean, transport ma...
Mobile consumers are key vectors of cross-ecosystem nutrients, yet have experienced population decli...
Seabird colonies can have significant effects on island trophic structure by infusing massive amount...
Seabirds redistribute nutrients between different ecosystem compartments and over vast geographical ...
Inputs of inorganic nutnents in 1992 from seabirds (white-capped noddy and wedgetail shearwater, ma...
Biotic connectivity between ecosystems can provide major transport of organic matter and nutrients, ...
Biological invasions pose a threat to nearly every ecosystem worldwide.1,2 Although eradication prog...
Cross-ecosystem nutrient subsidies play a key role in the structure and dynamics of recipient commun...
Islands house a majority of the world’s biodiversity and are thus critical for biodiversity conserv...
The biosphere is composed of a mosaic of ecosystems that are connected to one another through biolog...
Global climate change threatens tropical coral reefs, yet local management can influenc...
Abstract By improving resource quality, cross-ecosystem nutrient subsidies may boost demographic rat...
On many Pacific and Indian Ocean islands, colonization by humans brought invasive species, native ve...
Burrowing seabirds that nest on islands transfer nutrients from the sea, disturb the soil through bu...
Invasive species are widespread and can have devastating effects on biota, especially insular biota...
Seabirds on islands create a circular seabird economy - whereby they feed in the ocean, transport ma...
Mobile consumers are key vectors of cross-ecosystem nutrients, yet have experienced population decli...
Seabird colonies can have significant effects on island trophic structure by infusing massive amount...
Seabirds redistribute nutrients between different ecosystem compartments and over vast geographical ...
Inputs of inorganic nutnents in 1992 from seabirds (white-capped noddy and wedgetail shearwater, ma...