Density-dependent resource selection by a terrestrial herbivore in response to sea-to-land nutrient transfer by seals
Résumé
Sea-to-land nutrient transfers can connect marine food webs to those on land, creating a dependence on marine webs by opportunistic species. We show how nitrogen, imported by gray seals, Halichoerus grypus, and traced through stable isotope (δ 15 N) measurements in marram grass, Ammophila breviligulata, significantly alters foraging behavior of a free- roaming megaherbivore (feral horses, Equus ferus caballus) on Sable Island, Canada. Values of δ 15 N correlated with protein content of marram and strongly related to pupping- seal densities, and positively influenced selective foraging by horses. The latter was density dependent, consistent with optimal foraging theory. We present the first demonstration of how sea- to- land nutrient transfers can affect the behavioral process of resource selection (resource use relative to availability) of terrestrial consumers. We hypothesize that persistence of horses on Sable Island is being facilitated by N subsidies. Our results have relevance to advancing theory on trophic dynamics in island biogeography and metaecosystem ecology.