1989
DOI: 10.1126/science.2911739
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Habitat Compartmentation and Environmental Correlates of Food Chain Length

Abstract: Habitat Compartmentation and EnvironmentalCorrelates of Food Chain Length Briand and Cohen (1) condude that "the primary decomposers (bacteria and saprodimensionality of the environment influ-phytic fungi) or do not have phytoplankton ences mean or maximal [food] chain length distinguished from zooplankton. more than environmental variability" but doWe find that the concept of habitat dinot offer an explanation. After examining mensionality lacks sufficient rigor to be used the first 40 food webs that Briand… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(12 citation statements)
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References 9 publications
(6 reference statements)
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“…Comparisons of primary producer‐based and detritus‐based food chains from within published food webs reveal that they possess similar structural properties (Moore & Hunt 1988), anomalies in the descriptions notwithstanding (Briand & Cohen 1989; Moore et al. 1989).…”
Section: Food Chain Lengthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Comparisons of primary producer‐based and detritus‐based food chains from within published food webs reveal that they possess similar structural properties (Moore & Hunt 1988), anomalies in the descriptions notwithstanding (Briand & Cohen 1989; Moore et al. 1989).…”
Section: Food Chain Lengthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Eventually an unknown fraction of the detrital biomass enters the classic food web when detritivores are eaten by generalist predators engaging in 'different channel omnivory' (i.e. they feed on detritivores and herbivores; Moore et al 1989;Polis 1991a). Such omnivory intimately links the energetics and possible dynamics of consumers at many levels from both the herbivore and detritus based webs.…”
Section: Argumentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Omnivory occurs ubiquitously when consumers eat prey from general classes of prey such as arthropods, plankton, soil fauna, benthos, or fish (Cousins 1987;Moore et al 1989;Polis et al 1989). The existence of multiple trophic types within these classes causes consumers to feed on species from many trophic levels.…”
Section: Connectivity Food Webs: Their Limited Valuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…I have made no attempt to judge the quality of the data presented in the two compilations, and the importance of accurate data has been stressed repeatedly elsewhere (e.g., Paine 1988, Moore et al 1989, Winemiller 1990, Polis 1991, Martinez 1992. The methodological points I make are not contingent upon the accuracy or precision of the data.…”
Section: The Problemsmentioning
confidence: 99%