1. Southeast Alaskan kelp forests: inferences of process from large-scale patterns of variation in space and time.
- Author
-
Gorra TR, Garcia SCR, Langhans MR, Hoshijima U, Estes JA, Raimondi PT, Tinker MT, Kenner MC, and Kroeker KJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Ecosystem, Food Chain, Forests, Humans, Sea Urchins, Kelp, Otters
- Abstract
Humans were considered external drivers in much foundational ecological research. A recognition that humans are embedded in the complex interaction networks we study can provide new insight into our ecological paradigms. Here, we use time-series data spanning three decades to explore the effects of human harvesting on otter-urchin-kelp trophic cascades in southeast Alaska. These effects were inferred from variation in sea urchin and kelp abundance following the post fur trade repatriation of otters and a subsequent localized reduction of otters by human harvest in one location. In an example of a classic trophic cascade, otter repatriation was followed by a 99% reduction in urchin biomass density and a greater than 99% increase in kelp density region wide. Recent spatially concentrated harvesting of otters was associated with a localized 70% decline in otter abundance in one location, with urchins increasing and kelps declining in accordance with the spatial pattern of otter occupancy within that region. While the otter-urchin-kelp trophic cascade has been associated with alternative community states at the regional scale, this research highlights how small-scale variability in otter occupancy, ostensibly due to spatial variability in harvesting or the risk landscape for otters, can result in within-region patchiness in these community states.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF