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Trophic Dynamics in Urban Communities

473

Citations

47

References

2005

Year

Abstract

E cologists have long debated what factors control the trophic (feeding) structure and function of ecosystems. This is more than just a matter of determining "who eats whom"; ecologists have pondered whether there are fundamental rules for determining (a) how many trophic levels an ecosystem can support, (b) how much primary production is consumed by herbivores, and (c) whether resources from the bottom of the food chain, or consumers from the top, control biomass, abundance, and species diversity in food webs. These questions are not only fundamental to ecology but essential for conservation and management. For example, the loss of a top predator in a food web that is largely controlled by top-down forces may drastically alter biodiversity and ecosystem function (e.g., nutrient cycling), whereas the same loss may have little effect in a resourcecontrolled (i.e., bottom-up) food web.

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