Abstract Ecological communities are best studied at the landscape level, where linkages among communities are considered. Such linkages are often driven by increases in primary production caused by apex predators limiting herbivores. In this note, we describe a novel linkage among sea otters (Enhydra lutris), the long‐lived woody kelp (Pterygophora californica), and bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus). While counting sea otters in an isolated group of rocky islets on the Central Coast of British Columbia, we found an eagle nest composed of mostly Pterygophora stalks. Pterygophora recruits rapidly after sea otters arrive in an area and limit sea urchins; the subsequent pulsed Pterygophora recruitment results in narrow age‐class cohorts th...
While changes in the abundance of keystone predators can have cascading effects resulting in regime ...
The semelparous salmonid species are the ecological foundation of Pacific Northwest coastal ecosyste...
Sea otters (Enhydra lutris) are keystone predators that consume a variety of benthic invertebrates, ...
The recovery of predators has the potential to restore ecosystems and fundamentally alter the servic...
Sea otters are a classic example of a predator controlling ecosystem productivity through cascading ...
Sea otters are nearshore predators whose impacts have potential implications for the provision of ec...
Abstract Although trophic cascades—the effect of apex predators on progressively lower trophic level...
The influence of sea otters (Enhydra lutris) on nearshore marine communities has been widely studied...
Kelp (Laminariales), sea urchins (Mesocentrotus franciscanus and Strongylocentrotus spp.) and sea ot...
The loss or recovery of apex predators can have profound positive or negative ecological and socio-e...
After nearly a century of recovery from overhunting, sea otter populations are in abrupt decline ove...
As preferred prey become scarce, theory suggests that predator per-capita consumption rates decline ...
We compared sea otter recovery in California (CA) and British Columbia (BC) to determine how key eco...
Consumer and predator foraging behavior can impart profound trait-mediated constraints on community ...
Societies are greatly challenged by regime shifts, when ecosystems undergo fundamental changes that ...
While changes in the abundance of keystone predators can have cascading effects resulting in regime ...
The semelparous salmonid species are the ecological foundation of Pacific Northwest coastal ecosyste...
Sea otters (Enhydra lutris) are keystone predators that consume a variety of benthic invertebrates, ...
The recovery of predators has the potential to restore ecosystems and fundamentally alter the servic...
Sea otters are a classic example of a predator controlling ecosystem productivity through cascading ...
Sea otters are nearshore predators whose impacts have potential implications for the provision of ec...
Abstract Although trophic cascades—the effect of apex predators on progressively lower trophic level...
The influence of sea otters (Enhydra lutris) on nearshore marine communities has been widely studied...
Kelp (Laminariales), sea urchins (Mesocentrotus franciscanus and Strongylocentrotus spp.) and sea ot...
The loss or recovery of apex predators can have profound positive or negative ecological and socio-e...
After nearly a century of recovery from overhunting, sea otter populations are in abrupt decline ove...
As preferred prey become scarce, theory suggests that predator per-capita consumption rates decline ...
We compared sea otter recovery in California (CA) and British Columbia (BC) to determine how key eco...
Consumer and predator foraging behavior can impart profound trait-mediated constraints on community ...
Societies are greatly challenged by regime shifts, when ecosystems undergo fundamental changes that ...
While changes in the abundance of keystone predators can have cascading effects resulting in regime ...
The semelparous salmonid species are the ecological foundation of Pacific Northwest coastal ecosyste...
Sea otters (Enhydra lutris) are keystone predators that consume a variety of benthic invertebrates, ...