Chun-Yi Chang
National Taiwan University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Chun-Yi Chang.
Journal of Animal Ecology | 2013
Lin Ye; Chun-Yi Chang; Carmen García-Comas; Gwo-Ching Gong; Chih-hao Hsieh
1. The biodiversity-ecosystem functioning debate is a central topic in ecology. Recently, there has been a growing interest in size diversity because body size is sensitive to environmental changes and is one of the fundamental characteristics of organisms linking many ecosystem properties. However, how size diversity affects ecosystem functioning is an important yet unclear issue. 2. To fill the gap, with large-scale field data from the East China Sea, we tested the novel hypothesis that increasing zooplankton size diversity enhances top-down control on phytoplankton (H1) and compared it with five conventional hypotheses explaining the top-down control: flatter zooplankton size spectrum enhances the strength of top-down control (H2); nutrient enrichment lessens the strength of top-down control (H3); increasing zooplankton taxonomic diversity enhances the strength of top-down control (H4); increasing fish predation decreases the strength of top-down control of zooplankton on phytoplankton through trophic cascade (H5); increasing temperature intensifies the strength of top-down control (H6). 3. The results of univariate analyses support the hypotheses based on zooplankton size diversity (H1), zooplankton size spectrum (H2), nutrient (H3) and zooplankton taxonomic diversity (H4), but not the hypotheses based on fish predation (H5) and temperature (H6). More in-depth analyses indicate that zooplankton size diversity is the most important factor in determining the strength of top-down control on phytoplankton in the East China Sea. 4. Our results suggest a new potential mechanism that increasing predator size diversity enhances the strength of top-down control on prey through diet niche partitioning. This mechanism can be explained by the optimal predator-prey body-mass ratio concept. Suppose each size group of zooplankton predators has its own optimal phytoplankton prey size, increasing size diversity of zooplankton would promote diet niche partitioning of predators and thus elevates the strength of top-down control.
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences | 2016
Carmen García-Comas; Akash R. Sastri; Lin Ye; Chun-Yi Chang; Fan-Sian Lin; Min-Sian Su; Gwo-Ching Gong; Chih-hao Hsieh
Body size exerts multiple effects on plankton food-web interactions. However, the influence of size structure on trophic transfer remains poorly quantified in the field. Here, we examine how the size diversity of prey (nano-microplankton) and predators (mesozooplankton) influence trophic transfer efficiency (using biomass ratio as a proxy) in natural marine ecosystems. Our results support previous studies on single trophic levels: transfer efficiency decreases with increasing prey size diversity and is enhanced with greater predator size diversity. We further show that communities with low nano-microplankton size diversity and high mesozooplankton size diversity tend to occur in warmer environments with low nutrient concentrations, thus promoting trophic transfer to higher trophic levels in those conditions. Moreover, we reveal an interactive effect of predator and prey size diversities: the positive effect of predator size diversity becomes influential when prey size diversity is high. Mechanistically, the negative effect of prey size diversity on trophic transfer may be explained by unicellular size-based metabolic constraints as well as trade-offs between growth and predation avoidance with size, whereas increasing predator size diversity may enhance diet niche partitioning and thus promote trophic transfer. These findings provide insights into size-based theories of ecosystem functioning, with implications for ecosystem predictive models.
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2004
Chun-Yi Chang; Yoshiyuki Iizuka; Wann-Nian Tzeng
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2003
Jen-Chieh Shiao; Yoshiyuki Iizuka; Chun-Yi Chang; Wann-Nian Tzeng
Progress in Oceanography | 2014
Carmen García-Comas; Chun-Yi Chang; Lin Ye; Akash R. Sastri; Yu-Ching Lee; Gwo-Ching Gong; Chih-hao Hsieh
Diseases of Aquatic Organisms | 2006
M. Münderle; Horst Taraschewski; Bernhard Klar; Chun-Yi Chang; Jen-Chieh Shiao; K. N. Shen; J. T. He; S. H. Lin; Wann-Nian Tzeng
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2011
Lin Ye; Chun-Yi Chang; Chih-hao Hsieh
Ciencias Marinas | 2012
Al Ibáñez; Chun-Yi Chang; Chih-Chieh Hsu; Chia-Hui Wang; Yoshiyuki Iizuka; Wann-Nian Tzeng
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2009
K. N. Shen; Chun-Yi Chang; Yoshiyuki Iizuka; Wann-Nian Tzeng
Continental Shelf Research | 2012
Chun-Yi Chang; Pei-Chi Ho; Akash R. Sastri; Yu-Ching Lee; Gwo-Ching Gong; Chih-hao Hsieh