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Environmental correlates of molluscan predator–prey body size in the northern Gulf of Mexico

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2023

Luke A. Calderaro
Affiliation:
Department of Earth and Environmental Geosciences, Colgate University, Hamilton, New York 13346, U.S.A.
Paul G. Harnik*
Affiliation:
Department of Earth and Environmental Geosciences, Colgate University, Hamilton, New York 13346, U.S.A.
Marina C. Rillo
Affiliation:
Institute for Chemistry and Biology of the Marine Environment, Carl-von-Ossietzky University Oldenburg, Schleusenstraße 1, 26382 Wilhelmshaven, Germany
*
Corresponding author: Paul G. Harnik; Email: pharnik@colgate.edu

Abstract

The Mississippi River watershed drains 40% of the continental United States, and the tremendous primary productivity in the adjacent north-central Gulf of Mexico has created one of the most extensive dead zones on Earth. In contrast, smaller watersheds deliver fewer nutrients to the northeastern gulf, and consequently, productivity is limited and hypoxia is uncommon. How has variation in primary productivity, oxygen availability, and sea-surface temperature affected coastal food webs? Here, we investigate environmental controls on the size of molluscan predators and prey in the northern Gulf of Mexico using Holocene death assemblages. Linear mixed models indicate that bivalve size and the frequency of drilling predation are affected by dissolved oxygen concentrations; drilling frequency declines with declining oxygen, whereas bivalve size increases. In contrast, sea-surface temperature is positively associated with the size of molluscan predators and prey. Net primary productivity contributes relatively little to predator or prey size, and predator-to-prey size ratios do not vary consistently with environmental conditions across the northern gulf. Larger bivalves in areas of oxygen limitation may be due to decreased predation pressure and, consequently, greater prey longevity. The larger size of bivalves and predatory gastropods in warmer waters may reflect enhanced growth under these conditions, provided dissolved oxygen concentrations exceed a minimum threshold. Holocene death assemblages can be used to test long-standing hypotheses regarding environmental controls on predator−prey body-size distributions through geologic time and provide baselines for assessing the ongoing effects of anthropogenic eutrophication and warming on coastal food webs.

Information

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Paleontological Society
Figure 0

Table 1. Geographic coordinates of each sampling station and associated environmental data. NPP, net primary productivity; DO, dissolved oxygen concentration; SST, sea-surface temperature.

Figure 1

Figure 1. Location map. White hatched rectangle on the inset map of the contiguous United States denotes the location of the study area in the northern Gulf of Mexico. Detailed map includes 15 stations (open circles) located on the continental shelf offshore Louisiana, Alabama, and Florida. In each region, five stations spaced approximately 10 km apart were sampled along the −20 m isobath; stations are labeled from west to east, 21 to 25 (e.g., LA21 is the westernmost, and LA25 the easternmost, of the five stations sampled in Louisiana); see Table 1 for station geographic coordinates and associated environmental data. Ten-meter bathymetric contours (dotted gray lines) are plotted out to the continental shelf break (−200 m). Major river systems in the detailed land map are plotted as dashed gray lines.

Figure 2

Table 2. Summary data for individual stations, ordered from west to east across the northern Gulf of Mexico. Sample size is the total number of bivalve shells of the six focal genera. Drilled shells is the total number of drilled shells, including both complete and incomplete drill holes; instances of failed predation were uncommon (~10% of all drill holes). Drilling frequency is the frequency of shells with predatory drill holes, relative to the total number of bivalve individuals (i.e., the number of bivalve shells divided by two). Median shell area and drill-hole diameter represent median prey and predator size, respectively.

Figure 3

Figure 2. Proportional abundance of the six focal bivalve genera in Louisiana, Alabama, and Florida. Proportions were calculated by pooling the abundance data for the five stations in each region.

Figure 4

Figure 3. Geographic variation in prey size (shell area, in mm2, A), predator size (drill-hole diameter, in mm, B), and predator-to-prey size ratio (% of shell area drilled, C); all size measures are plotted on a logarithmic scale. Size measurements greater or less than 1.5 times the interquartile range are shown as open circles. Solid gray vertical lines separate the three study regions (Louisiana, Alabama, and Florida).

Figure 5

Figure 4. Regional variation in drilling frequency, measured as the frequency of bivalve shells with predatory drill holes at each of the five sampling stations in each region, relative to the total number of bivalve individuals (i.e., the number of bivalve shells divided by two). Median drilling frequency varies markedly across the northern Gulf of Mexico, with the lowest frequency in coastal Louisiana.

Figure 6

Table 3. Results for a set of linear mixed-effects models that consider the associations between prey size and environmental variables across the northern Gulf of Mexico. Models are ordered according to their relative support using Akaike weights; the first model is the best-supported model in the set. In all models, genus was included as a random effect. Environmental variables were scaled to zero mean and unit variance to allow their fixed effects on size to be assessed on a comparable scale. Confidence intervals are provided for each fixed effect along with the associated p-value; significance at p = 0.05. AIC, Akaike information criterion; AW, Akaike weight; VIF, variance inflation factor; NPP, net primary productivity; DO, dissolved oxygen concentration; SST, sea-surface temperature; NPP*DO is the multiplicative effect of net primary productivity and dissolved oxygen concentration.

Figure 7

Table 4. Results for a set of linear mixed-effects models that consider the associations between predator size and environmental variables across the northern Gulf of Mexico. Models are ordered according to their relative support using Akaike weights; the first model is the best-supported model in the set. In all models, the taxonomic identity of the prey (genus) was included as a random effect. Environmental variables were scaled to zero mean and unit variance to allow their fixed effects on size to be assessed on a comparable scale. Confidence intervals are provided for each fixed effect along with the associated p-value; significance at p = 0.05. AIC, Akaike information criterion; AW, Akaike weight; VIF, variance inflation factor; NPP, net primary productivity; DO, dissolved oxygen concentration; SST, sea-surface temperature; NPP*DO is the multiplicative effect of net primary productivity and dissolved oxygen concentration.

Figure 8

Table 5. Results for a set of linear mixed-effects models that consider the associations between predator-to-prey size ratio and environmental variables across the northern Gulf of Mexico. Models are ordered according to their relative support using Akaike weights; the first model is the best-supported model in the set. In all models, the taxonomic identity of the prey (genus) was included as a random effect. Environmental variables were scaled to zero mean and unit variance to allow their fixed effects on the predator-to-prey size ratio to be assessed on a comparable scale. Confidence intervals are provided for each fixed effect along with the associated p-value; significance at p = 0.05. AIC, Akaike information criterion; AW, Akaike weight; VIF, variance inflation factor; NPP, net primary productivity; DO, dissolved oxygen concentration; SST, sea-surface temperature; NPP*DO is the multiplicative effect of net primary productivity and dissolved oxygen concentration.

Figure 9

Table 6. Results for a set of binomial linear mixed-effects models that consider the associations between drilling frequency (drilled vs. non-drilled) and environmental variables across the northern Gulf of Mexico. Models are ordered according to their relative support using Akaike weights; the first model is the best-supported model in the set. In all models, the taxonomic identity of the prey (genus) was included as a random effect. Environmental variables were scaled to zero mean and unit variance to allow their fixed effects on drilling frequency to be assessed on a comparable scale. Confidence intervals are provided for each fixed effect along with the associated p-value; significance at p = 0.05. AIC, Akaike information criterion; AW, Akaike weight; VIF, variance inflation factor; NPP, net primary productivity; DO, dissolved oxygen concentration; SST, sea-surface temperature; NPP*DO is the multiplicative effect of net primary productivity and dissolved oxygen concentration.

Figure 10

Table 7. Associations between environmental variables and prey size, predator size, predator-to-prey size ratio, and drilling frequency across the northern Gulf of Mexico. Estimated fixed effects were calculated by model averaging of parameter estimates using the Akaike weight of each model in the set that was considered. Because the environmental variables were scaled to zero mean and unit variance, their relative effects on a given response variable can be assessed on a comparable scale. NPP, net primary productivity; DO, dissolved oxygen concentration; SST, sea-surface temperature; NPP*DO is the multiplicative effect of net primary productivity and dissolved oxygen concentration.

Figure 11

Figure 5. Variation in the size of bivalve prey and their drilling predators along different environmental gradients in the northern Gulf of Mexico, plotted on a logarithmic scale. Statistically significant size–environment associations are plotted in each panel; see Tables 3 and 4 for further detail. Prey size is inversely associated with dissolved oxygen concentration (A), and positively associated with sea-surface temperature (B) and net primary productivity (C). Predator size (D) is positively associated with sea-surface temperature. Solid black dots are the median sizes, and vertical lines are the interquartile ranges. The low spatial resolution of available dissolved oxygen data meant there were a total of four sites in the World Ocean Atlas with dissolved oxygen data proximal enough to be matched to our stations.