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Evidence that dimethyl sulfide facilitates a tritrophic mutualism between marine primary producers and top predators.


ABSTRACT: Tritrophic mutualistic interactions have been best studied in plant-insect systems. During these interactions, plants release volatiles in response to herbivore damage, which, in turn, facilitates predation on primary consumers or benefits the primary producer by providing nutrients. Here we explore a similar interaction in the Southern Ocean food web, where soluble iron limits primary productivity. Dimethyl sulfide has been studied in the context of global climate regulation and is an established foraging cue for marine top predators. We present evidence that procellariiform seabird species that use dimethyl sulfide as a foraging cue selectively forage on phytoplankton grazers. Their contribution of beneficial iron recycled to marine phytoplankton via excretion suggests a chemically mediated link between marine top predators and oceanic primary production.

SUBMITTER: Savoca MS 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3964091 | biostudies-literature | 2014 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Evidence that dimethyl sulfide facilitates a tritrophic mutualism between marine primary producers and top predators.

Savoca Matthew S MS   Nevitt Gabrielle A GA  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20140303 11


Tritrophic mutualistic interactions have been best studied in plant-insect systems. During these interactions, plants release volatiles in response to herbivore damage, which, in turn, facilitates predation on primary consumers or benefits the primary producer by providing nutrients. Here we explore a similar interaction in the Southern Ocean food web, where soluble iron limits primary productivity. Dimethyl sulfide has been studied in the context of global climate regulation and is an establish  ...[more]

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