Species interactions in food webs are usually recognized as dynamic, varying across species, space and time due to biotic and abiotic drivers. Yet food webs also show emergent properties that appear consistent, such as a skewed frequency distribution of interaction strengths (many weak, few strong). Reconciling these two properties requires an understanding of the variation in pairwise interaction strengths and its underlying mechanisms. We estimated stream sculpin feeding rates in three seasons at nine sites in Oregon to examine variation in trophic interaction strengths both across and within predator-prey pairs. Predator and prey densities, prey body mass, and abiotic factors were considered as putative drivers of within-pair variation o...
1. We examined the empirical relationship between predator–prey body size ratio and interaction stre...
Understanding how the structure and function of aquatic communities vary across space and time is es...
Citation: Hopper, G. W., & Tobler, M. (2016). Patterns of trophic resource use and individual specia...
Species interactions in food webs are usually recognized as dynamic, varying across species, space a...
1. Food webs are a powerful way to represent the diversity, structure, and function of ecological sy...
Recent research has generally shown that a small change in the number of species in a food web can h...
1. Coexistence of predators that share the same prey is common. This is still the case in size struc...
Aquatic ecosystems support size structured food webs, wherein predator-prey body sizes span orders o...
Patterns of species interactions affect the dynamics of food webs. An important component of species...
Patterns of species interactions affect the dynamics of food webs. An important comp...
Relative numerical dominance and densities of invertebrate functional feeding groups are compared wi...
Stream ecosystems are dynamic and they have an inherent environmental variability. Organisms that li...
1. In complex food webs, interactions among species in different trophic levels can generate cascadi...
Networks of direct and indirect biotic interactions underpin the complex dynamics and stability of e...
Understanding the factors underpinning to food web structure and stability is a long-standing issue ...
1. We examined the empirical relationship between predator–prey body size ratio and interaction stre...
Understanding how the structure and function of aquatic communities vary across space and time is es...
Citation: Hopper, G. W., & Tobler, M. (2016). Patterns of trophic resource use and individual specia...
Species interactions in food webs are usually recognized as dynamic, varying across species, space a...
1. Food webs are a powerful way to represent the diversity, structure, and function of ecological sy...
Recent research has generally shown that a small change in the number of species in a food web can h...
1. Coexistence of predators that share the same prey is common. This is still the case in size struc...
Aquatic ecosystems support size structured food webs, wherein predator-prey body sizes span orders o...
Patterns of species interactions affect the dynamics of food webs. An important component of species...
Patterns of species interactions affect the dynamics of food webs. An important comp...
Relative numerical dominance and densities of invertebrate functional feeding groups are compared wi...
Stream ecosystems are dynamic and they have an inherent environmental variability. Organisms that li...
1. In complex food webs, interactions among species in different trophic levels can generate cascadi...
Networks of direct and indirect biotic interactions underpin the complex dynamics and stability of e...
Understanding the factors underpinning to food web structure and stability is a long-standing issue ...
1. We examined the empirical relationship between predator–prey body size ratio and interaction stre...
Understanding how the structure and function of aquatic communities vary across space and time is es...
Citation: Hopper, G. W., & Tobler, M. (2016). Patterns of trophic resource use and individual specia...