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      Food Webs 

      Allochthonous Input Across Habitats, Subsidized Consumers, and Apparent Trophic Cascades: Examples from the Ocean-Land Interface

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      Springer US

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          Exploitation Ecosystems in Gradients of Primary Productivity

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            Paradox of enrichment: destabilization of exploitation ecosystems in ecological time.

            Six reasonable models of trophic exploitation in a two-species ecosystem whose exploiters compete only by depleting each other's resource supply are presented. In each case, increasing the supply of limiting nutrients or energy tends to destroy the steady state. Thus man must be very careful in attempting to enrich an ecosystem in order to increase its food yield. There is a real chance that such activity may result in decimation of the food species that are wanted in greater abundance.
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              Magnification of secondary production by kelp detritus in coastal marine ecosystems.

              Kelps are highly productive seaweeds found along most temperate latitude coastlines, but the fate and importance of kelp production to nearshore ecosystems are largely unknown. The trophic role of kelp-derived carbon in a wide range of marine organisms was assessed by a natural experiment. Growth rates of benthic suspension feeders were greatly increased in the presence of organic detritus (particulate and dissolved) originating from large benthic seaweeds (kelps). Stable carbon isotope analysis confirmed that kelp-derived carbon is found throughout the nearshore food web.
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                Book Chapter
                1996
                : 275-285
                10.1007/978-1-4615-7007-3_27
                2d3df8a6-a46b-4040-bebb-69aadd40c04a
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