Login / Signup

Tree communities and functional traits determine herbivore compositional turnover.

Ming-Qiang WangZhixin WenJinzhao KeDouglas ChestersYi LiJing-Ting ChenArong LuoXiaoyu ShiQing-Song ZhouXiao-Juan LiuKeping MaHelge BruelheideAndreas SchuldtChao-Dong Zhu
Published in: Oecologia (2023)
There are many factors known to drive species turnover, although the mechanisms by which these operate are less clear. Based on comprehensive datasets from the largest tree diversity experiment worldwide (BEF-China), we used shared herbivore species (zeta diversity) and multi-site generalized dissimilarity modelling to investigate the patterns and determinants of species turnover of Lepidoptera herbivores among study plots across a gradient in tree species richness. We found that zeta diversity declined sharply with an increasing number of study plots, with complete changes in caterpillar species composition observed even at the fine spatial scale of our study. Plant community characteristics rather than abiotic factors were found to play key roles in driving caterpillar compositional turnover, although these effects varied with an increasing number of study plots considered, due to the varying contributions of rare and common species to compositional turnover. Our study reveals details of the impact of phylogeny- and trait-mediated processes of trees on herbivore compositional turnover, which has implications for forest management and conservation and shows potential avenues for maintenance of heterogeneity in herbivore communities.
Keyphrases
  • bone mineral density
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • genome wide
  • climate change
  • postmenopausal women
  • risk assessment
  • single cell
  • body composition
  • human health
  • genome wide analysis