Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/49594
Title: Habitat cascades: The conceptual context and global relevance of facilitation cascades via habitat formation and modification
Authors: Thomsen, Mads S.
Wernberg, Thomas
Altieri, Andrew
Tuya, Fernando 
Gulbransen, Dana
McGlathery, Karen J.
Holmer, Marianne
Silliman, Brian R.
UNESCO Clasification: 240119 Zoología marina
241705 Biología marina
Keywords: Ecosystem Engineers
Gracilaria-Vermiculophylla
Positive Interactions
Relative Importance
Mobile Epifauna, et al
Issue Date: 2010
Publisher: Oxford University Press 
Journal: Integrative and Comparative Biology 
Abstract: The importance of positive interactions is increasingly acknowledged in contemporary ecology. Most research has focused on direct positive effects of one species on another. However, there is recent evidence that indirect positive effects in the form of facilitation cascades can also structure species abundances and biodiversity. Here we conceptualize a specific type of facilitation cascade—the habitat cascade. The habitat cascade is defined as indirect positive effects on focal organisms mediated by successive facilitation in the form of biogenic formation or modification of habitat. Based on a literature review, we demonstrate that habitat cascades are a general phenomenon that enhances species abundance and diversity in forests, salt marshes, seagrass meadows, and seaweed beds. Habitat cascades are characterized by a hierarchy of facilitative interactions in which a basal habitat former (typically a large primary producer, e.g., a tree) creates living space for an intermediate habitat former (e.g., an epiphyte) that in turn creates living space for the focal organisms (e.g., spiders, beetles, and mites). We then present new data on a habitat cascade common to soft-bottom estuaries in which a relatively small invertebrate provides basal habitat for larger intermediate seaweeds that, in turn, generate habitat for focal invertebrates and epiphytes. We propose that indirect positive effects on focal organisms will be strongest when the intermediate habitat former is larger and different in form and function from the basal habitat former. We also discuss how humans create, modify, and destroy habitat cascades via global habitat destruction, climatic change, over-harvesting, pollution, or transfer of invasive species. Finally, we outline future directions for research that will lead to a better understanding of habitat cascades.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/49594
ISSN: 1540-7063
DOI: 10.1093/icb/icq042
Source: Integrative and Comparative Biology [ISSN 1540-7063], v. 50, p. 158-175
Appears in Collections:Actas de congresos
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