Predator diversity and abundance provide little support for the enemies hypothesis in forests of high tree diversity

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Authors

Predatory arthropods can exert strong top-down control on ecosystem functions. However, despite extensive theory and experimental manipulations of predator diversity, our knowledge about relationships between plant and predator diversity--and thus information on the relevance of experimental findings--for species-rich, natural ecosystems is limited. We studied activity abundance and species richness of epigeic spiders in a highly diverse forest ecosystem in subtropical China across 27 forest stands which formed a gradient in tree diversity of 25-69 species per plot. The enemies hypothesis predicts higher predator abundance and diversity, and concomitantly more effective top-down control of food webs, with increasing plant diversity. However, in our study, activity abundance and observed species richness of spiders decreased with increasing tree species richness. There was only a weak, non-significant relationship with tree richness when spider richness was rarefied, i.e. corrected for different total abundances of spiders. Only foraging guild richness (i.e. the diversity of hunting modes) of spiders was positively related to tree species richness. Plant species richness in the herb layer had no significant effects on spiders. Our results thus provide little support for the enemies hypothesis--derived from studies in less diverse ecosystems--of a positive relationship between predator and plant diversity. Our findings for an important group of generalist predators question whether stronger top-down control of food webs can be expected in the more plant diverse stands of our forest ecosystem. Biotic interactions could play important roles in mediating the observed relationships between spider and plant diversity, but further testing is required for a more detailed mechanistic understanding. Our findings have implications for evaluating the way in which theoretical predictions and experimental findings of functional predator effects apply to species-rich forest ecosystems, in which trophic interactions are often considered to be of crucial importance for the maintenance of high plant diversity.
OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummere22905
ZeitschriftPLoS ONE
Jahrgang6
Ausgabenummer7
Anzahl der Seiten8
DOIs
PublikationsstatusErschienen - 28.07.2011

Bibliographische Notiz

The funding by the German Science Foundation (DFG FOR 891/1) and by the National Science Foundation of China (NSFC 30710103907 and 30930005), as well as various travel grants to prepare the project financed by DFG, NSFC and the Sino-German Centre for Research Promotion in Beijing (GZ 524, 592, 698 and 699) are highly acknowledged. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

Zugehörige Projekte

  • Individual plant growth and plant demography as a function of species richness and composition (FOR 891 - Teilprojekt 02)

    Projekt: Forschung

Dokumente

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Publikationen

  1. How digital reflection and feedback environments contribute to pre-service teachers’ beliefs during a teaching practicum
  2. Performance of the Chemcatcher ® passive sampler when used to monitor 10 polar and semi-polar pesticides in 16 Central European streams, and comparison with two other sampling methods
  3. Machine vision system for UAV navigation
  4. Automation in Clinical Laboratories
  5. Microstructure and creep properties of MEZ magnesium alloy processed by thixocasting
  6. Estimation of physicochemical properties of 52 non-PBDE brominated flame retardants and evaluation of their overall persistence and long-range transport potential
  7. On the measuring accuracy of the “Vehrs-Hebel”, a scaling apparatus for nonverbal real-time assessment of perceived quantity
  8. The three-month effect of mobile internet-based cognitive therapy on the course of depressive symptoms in remitted recurrently depressed patients
  9. Comparing the fatigue performance of Ti-4Al-0.005B titanium alloy T-joints, welded via different friction stir welding sequences
  10. The Hanoverian Supply Chain Model: modelling the impact of production planning and control on a supply chain's logistic objectives
  11. The Population Trajectories Both of the Wild Rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) and the Iberian Lynx (Lynx pardinus) in Spain
  12. Modell „Juniorprofessur“
  13. What Do They Reflect on?—A Mixed-Methods Analysis of Physical Education Preservice Teachers’ Written Reflections After a Long-Term Internship
  14. Did Descriptive and Prescriptive Norms About Gender Equality at Home Change During the COVID-19 Pandemic? A Cross-National Investigation
  15. Sustainable Development as a Challenge for Undergraduate Students: The Module "Science Bears Responsibility" in the Leuphana Bachelor's Programme
  16. The online inverted classroom model (oICM). A blueprint to adapt the inverted classroom to an online learning setting in medical and health education
  17. Impacts of entrepreneur’s error orientation on performance: A cross-culture comparison
  18. A Control-Value Theory Approach
  19. Fallstudie
  20. Effects of introspective vs. extraspective instruction in scaling of hedonic properties of flavouring ingredients by Chinese and German subjects
  21. The need for pluralism in landscape models: a reply to Dunn and Majer
  22. Sensor Measures of Affective Leaning