| Grant number: | 15/26859-3 |
| Support Opportunities: | Scholarships in Brazil - Doctorate |
| Start date: | June 01, 2016 |
| End date: | August 31, 2021 |
| Field of knowledge: | Biological Sciences - Ecology - Theoretical Ecology |
| Principal Investigator: | Ronaldo Adriano Christofoletti |
| Grantee: | Andre Luiz Pardal Souza |
| Host Institution: | Instituto de Saúde e Sociedade (ISS). Universidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP). Campus Baixada Santista. Santos , SP, Brazil |
| Associated scholarship(s): | 17/09641-0 - Effect of metal contamination on a rocky intertidal predator-prey interaction, BE.EP.DR |
Abstract The strength of ecological interactions among species is of fundamental importance in determining community dynamics and the functioning of ecosystems. In marine systems environmental mediation of the strength of ecological interactions can be driven by thermal stress, wave action, upwelling, ocean currents and other factors that may operate through effects at the population level or in determining per capita interaction strength. However, such drivers emerge at different scales and it has been a challenge for ecologists to scale up from local experiments to encompass regional and geographic variation in the physical environment. In a globally changing environment, understanding of how environmental drivers over diverse spatial scales interact and determination of how these drivers modify both population parameters and per capita interaction strength is required if we are to build predictive capacity and hence manage natural systems. Here, we propose to use the Brazilian rocky coastline to test whether the effect of a latitudinal gradient in temperature on species interactions is modified by regional upwelling and other small-medium scale environmental drivers. We will use the intertidal predator-prey system of whelks and barnacle/mussels to evaluate how population parameters, such as abundance and size of individuals change in relation to temperature, productivity and wave exposure through an observational approach based on a large scale survey. An experimental approach will be used to determine variation in per capita interaction strength over local and regional spatial scales. At local scales, the relative importance of environmental (e.g. wave exposure) and biological (e.g. prey density) factors on the per capita interaction strength of whelks will be evaluated while at regional scale we will test how upwelling modifies a latitudinal gradient in temperature. Based on these results, we aim to determine how changes in the environment will modify consumer-prey interactions in the coastal zone. | |
| News published in Agência FAPESP Newsletter about the scholarship: | |
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