Authors
Ellen J Weerman, Peter MJ Herman, Johan Van de Koppel
Publication date
2011/2
Journal
Ecology
Volume
92
Issue
2
Pages
487-495
Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Description
Regular, self‐organized spatial patterns in primary producers have been described in a wide range of ecosystems and are predicted to affect community production and resilience. Although consumers are abundant in most systems, the effect of trophic interactions on pattern formation in primary producers remains unstudied. We studied the effects of top‐down control by herbivores on a self‐organized landscape of regularly spaced, diatom‐covered hummocks alternating with water‐filled hollows on an intertidal mudflat in The Netherlands. Spatial patterns developed during spring but were followed by a rapid collapse in summer, leading to a flat landscape with low diatom densities and little variation in sediment bed level. This dramatic decline co‐occurred with a gradual increase of benthic herbivores. A manipulative field experiment, where benthic herbivores were removed from the sediment, revealed that both …
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