Indirect trophic effects play important roles in ecosystem dynamics and can at times oppose and dominate the action of direct
feeding linkages. Each predator directly exerts a negative effect upon its prey, but predators may also provide indirect benefits
to their prey. In ecosystems, such benefits are effected via indirect trophic pathways that can provide a more than compensating
positive influence. The ecosystem of the Big Cypress National Preserve (southwest Florida) appears to contain an unusually
high number of such predators—most notably, the American alligator,
Alligator mississippiensis. The trophic exchanges of carbon among the 68 principal taxa comprising the cypress wetland ecosystem have been quantified
during both wet and dry seasons. The network analysis program IMPACTS identified predators that potentially have a positive
influence on some of their prey. A total of 64 of these instances were recorded for the wet season and 44 for the dry. Taxa
that, on balance, have positive effects upon their prey include fishes, turtles, snakes, birds, and, most significantly, alligators.
The feeding habits of alligators benefit a conspicuous number (11) of their prey (invertebrates, frogs, mice, and rats). Further
trophic analysis reveals that the predation by alligators on snakes and turtles accounts for most of the trophic benefits
bestowed. The actions of alligators in modifying their physical environment has been cited elsewhere as contributing to the
maintenance of biotic diversity. It appears that the trophic influence of this species adds further evidence to the important
role it plays in the functional ecology of the cypress wetland.
Key words: cypress swamps; ecosystem; indirect interactions; network analysis; predator–prey interaction; Alligator mississippiensis.
Received 4 March 1998; accepted 21 October 1998