TY - JOUR
T1 - A large invasive consumer reduces coastal ecosystem resilience by disabling positive species interactions
AU - Hensel, Marc J.S.
AU - Silliman, Brian R.
AU - van de Koppel, Johan
AU - Hensel, Enie
AU - Sharp, Sean J.
AU - Crotty, Sinead M.
AU - Byrnes, Jarrett E.K.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the staff at the Sapelo Island NERR for logistical assistance during this project, as well as teachers from the LTER Schoolyard Program for assistance in the field. We also thank Christine Angelini, Jen Bowen, Jon Grabowski, and Ron Etter for constructive feedback on earlier drafts. This research was funded through an NOAA-NERR Graduate Research Fellowship awarded to M.J.S.H. (Award no. NA12NOS4200087). This work is a product of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER project.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s).
PY - 2021/12
Y1 - 2021/12
N2 - Invasive consumers can cause extensive ecological damage to native communities but effects on ecosystem resilience are less understood. Here, we use drone surveys, manipulative experiments, and mathematical models to show how feral hogs reduce resilience in southeastern US salt marshes by dismantling an essential marsh cordgrass-ribbed mussel mutualism. Mussels usually double plant growth and enhance marsh resilience to extreme drought but, when hogs invade, switch from being essential for plant survival to a liability; hogs selectively forage in mussel-rich areas leading to a 50% reduction in plant biomass and slower post-drought recovery rate. Hogs increase habitat fragmentation across landscapes by maintaining large, disturbed areas through trampling of cordgrass during targeted mussel consumption. Experiments and climate-disturbance recovery models show trampling alone slows marsh recovery by 3x while focused mussel predation creates marshes that may never recover from large-scale disturbances without hog eradication. Our work highlights that an invasive consumer can reshape ecosystems not just via competition and predation, but by disrupting key, positive species interactions that underlie resilience to climatic disturbances.
AB - Invasive consumers can cause extensive ecological damage to native communities but effects on ecosystem resilience are less understood. Here, we use drone surveys, manipulative experiments, and mathematical models to show how feral hogs reduce resilience in southeastern US salt marshes by dismantling an essential marsh cordgrass-ribbed mussel mutualism. Mussels usually double plant growth and enhance marsh resilience to extreme drought but, when hogs invade, switch from being essential for plant survival to a liability; hogs selectively forage in mussel-rich areas leading to a 50% reduction in plant biomass and slower post-drought recovery rate. Hogs increase habitat fragmentation across landscapes by maintaining large, disturbed areas through trampling of cordgrass during targeted mussel consumption. Experiments and climate-disturbance recovery models show trampling alone slows marsh recovery by 3x while focused mussel predation creates marshes that may never recover from large-scale disturbances without hog eradication. Our work highlights that an invasive consumer can reshape ecosystems not just via competition and predation, but by disrupting key, positive species interactions that underlie resilience to climatic disturbances.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85118457685&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/s41467-021-26504-4
DO - 10.1038/s41467-021-26504-4
M3 - Article
C2 - 34725328
AN - SCOPUS:85118457685
SN - 2041-1723
VL - 12
JO - Nature Communications
JF - Nature Communications
IS - 1
M1 - 6290
ER -