While predators can drive abrupt and profound changes in food web components, what is less well known and more difficult to quantify is how predators influence entire ecosystem organization and function. Sea otter (Enhydra lutris) recovery on temperate reefs is known to trigger regime shifts, converting urchin-dominated reefs to kelp-dominated reefs, yet the impacts of this keystone species on entire ecosystem dynamics remain less understood. We used stable isotope analysis and a Bayesian modeling approach to study the effects of sea otter recovery on the trophic niche space of a rocky reef species assemblage. Examination of community-wide niche metrics revealed an increase in the overall community niche space with increasing otter occupati...
Predator recovery often leads to ecosystem change that can trigger conflicts with more recently est...
Sea otters (Enhydra lutris) are keystone predators that consume a variety of benthic invertebrates, ...
Predator populations are in decline globally. Exploitation, as well as habitat degradation and assoc...
As preferred prey become scarce, theory suggests that predator per-capita consumption rates decline ...
The loss or recovery of apex predators can have profound positive or negative ecological and socio-e...
While changes in the abundance of keystone predators can have cascading effects resulting in regime ...
Sea otters are a classic example of a predator controlling ecosystem productivity through cascading ...
Abstract Although trophic cascades—the effect of apex predators on progressively lower trophic level...
The recovery of predators has the potential to restore ecosystems and fundamentally alter the servic...
Consumer and predator foraging behavior can impart profound trait-mediated constraints on community ...
Predators exert strong effects on ecological communities, particularly when they re-occupy areas aft...
The influence of sea otters (Enhydra lutris) on nearshore marine communities has been widely studied...
Societies are greatly challenged by regime shifts, when ecosystems undergo fundamental changes that ...
Empirical evaluations of the ecological processes that enhance or dampen the likelihood of shifts be...
Sea urchin population demographics can respond to changes in keystone species abundances, with the m...
Predator recovery often leads to ecosystem change that can trigger conflicts with more recently est...
Sea otters (Enhydra lutris) are keystone predators that consume a variety of benthic invertebrates, ...
Predator populations are in decline globally. Exploitation, as well as habitat degradation and assoc...
As preferred prey become scarce, theory suggests that predator per-capita consumption rates decline ...
The loss or recovery of apex predators can have profound positive or negative ecological and socio-e...
While changes in the abundance of keystone predators can have cascading effects resulting in regime ...
Sea otters are a classic example of a predator controlling ecosystem productivity through cascading ...
Abstract Although trophic cascades—the effect of apex predators on progressively lower trophic level...
The recovery of predators has the potential to restore ecosystems and fundamentally alter the servic...
Consumer and predator foraging behavior can impart profound trait-mediated constraints on community ...
Predators exert strong effects on ecological communities, particularly when they re-occupy areas aft...
The influence of sea otters (Enhydra lutris) on nearshore marine communities has been widely studied...
Societies are greatly challenged by regime shifts, when ecosystems undergo fundamental changes that ...
Empirical evaluations of the ecological processes that enhance or dampen the likelihood of shifts be...
Sea urchin population demographics can respond to changes in keystone species abundances, with the m...
Predator recovery often leads to ecosystem change that can trigger conflicts with more recently est...
Sea otters (Enhydra lutris) are keystone predators that consume a variety of benthic invertebrates, ...
Predator populations are in decline globally. Exploitation, as well as habitat degradation and assoc...