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Autores principales: Carvajal-Quintero, Juan D, Dornelas, Maria, Comte, Lise, Herrera-Pérez, Juliana, Tedesco, Pablo A, Giam, Xingli, Brose, Ulrich, Chase, Jonathan M
Formato: Artículo científico
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: Science advances 2026
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Acceso en línea:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41706865/
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author Carvajal-Quintero, Juan D
Dornelas, Maria
Comte, Lise
Herrera-Pérez, Juliana
Tedesco, Pablo A
Giam, Xingli
Brose, Ulrich
Chase, Jonathan M
author_facet Carvajal-Quintero, Juan D
Dornelas, Maria
Comte, Lise
Herrera-Pérez, Juliana
Tedesco, Pablo A
Giam, Xingli
Brose, Ulrich
Chase, Jonathan M
Carvajal-Quintero, Juan D
Dornelas, Maria
Comte, Lise
Herrera-Pérez, Juliana
Tedesco, Pablo A
Giam, Xingli
Brose, Ulrich
Chase, Jonathan M
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Degradation of fish food webs in the Anthropocene. Carvajal-Quintero, Juan D Dornelas, Maria Comte, Lise Herrera-Pérez, Juliana Tedesco, Pablo A Giam, Xingli Brose, Ulrich Chase, Jonathan M Animals Food Chain Fishes Biodiversity Predatory Behavior Ecosystem Body Size Global change reshapes biodiversity through shifts in species composition, richness, and body size. How these shifts combine to alter higher-level ecological processes within food webs can have important implications for entire ecosystems. However, the strength and direction of these shifts will depend on combinations of ways that species and trait compositions change through time. We combine long-term data from ~15,000 freshwater and marine fish communities (1949-2019) with information about their size, diets, and trophic status to evaluate how food webs change through time at local spatial scale. We found that selective species turnover driven by body size reductions is associated with widespread alteration to fish food web topology and function, including increased connectance and generalism, leading to higher predation pressure and increased prey vulnerability. Food webs were also less modular. These changes extend across food web trophic structures, causing a cascading shift in the proportion of species across trophic levels. Our study highlights complex biodiversity responses to confluent changes across multiple facets.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_41706865
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2026
publisher Science advances
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Degradation of fish food webs in the Anthropocene.
Carvajal-Quintero, Juan D
Dornelas, Maria
Comte, Lise
Herrera-Pérez, Juliana
Tedesco, Pablo A
Giam, Xingli
Brose, Ulrich
Chase, Jonathan M
Animals
Food Chain
Fishes
Biodiversity
Predatory Behavior
Ecosystem
Body Size
Degradation of fish food webs in the Anthropocene. Carvajal-Quintero, Juan D Dornelas, Maria Comte, Lise Herrera-Pérez, Juliana Tedesco, Pablo A Giam, Xingli Brose, Ulrich Chase, Jonathan M Animals Food Chain Fishes Biodiversity Predatory Behavior Ecosystem Body Size Global change reshapes biodiversity through shifts in species composition, richness, and body size. How these shifts combine to alter higher-level ecological processes within food webs can have important implications for entire ecosystems. However, the strength and direction of these shifts will depend on combinations of ways that species and trait compositions change through time. We combine long-term data from ~15,000 freshwater and marine fish communities (1949-2019) with information about their size, diets, and trophic status to evaluate how food webs change through time at local spatial scale. We found that selective species turnover driven by body size reductions is associated with widespread alteration to fish food web topology and function, including increased connectance and generalism, leading to higher predation pressure and increased prey vulnerability. Food webs were also less modular. These changes extend across food web trophic structures, causing a cascading shift in the proportion of species across trophic levels. Our study highlights complex biodiversity responses to confluent changes across multiple facets.
title Degradation of fish food webs in the Anthropocene.
topic Animals
Food Chain
Fishes
Biodiversity
Predatory Behavior
Ecosystem
Body Size
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41706865/