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Land-use type and intensity differentially filter traits in above- and below-ground arthropod communities

Birkhofer, Klaus LU ; Gossner, Martin M. ; Diekötter, Tim ; Drees, Claudia ; Ferlian, Olga ; Maraun, Mark ; Scheu, Stefan ; Weisser, Wolfgang W ; Wolters, Volkmar and Wurst, Susanne , et al. (2017) In Journal of Animal Ecology 86(3). p.511-520
Abstract

Along with the global decline of species richness goes a loss of ecological traits. Associated biotic homogenization of animal communities and narrowing of trait diversity threaten ecosystem functioning and human well-being. High management intensity is regarded as an important ecological filter, eliminating species that lack suitable adaptations. Below-ground arthropods are assumed to be less sensitive to such effects than above-ground arthropods. Here, we compared the impact of management intensity between (grassland vs. forest) and within land-use types (local management intensity) on the trait diversity and composition in below- and above-ground arthropod communities. We used data on 722 arthropod species living above-ground... (More)

Along with the global decline of species richness goes a loss of ecological traits. Associated biotic homogenization of animal communities and narrowing of trait diversity threaten ecosystem functioning and human well-being. High management intensity is regarded as an important ecological filter, eliminating species that lack suitable adaptations. Below-ground arthropods are assumed to be less sensitive to such effects than above-ground arthropods. Here, we compared the impact of management intensity between (grassland vs. forest) and within land-use types (local management intensity) on the trait diversity and composition in below- and above-ground arthropod communities. We used data on 722 arthropod species living above-ground (Auchenorrhyncha and Heteroptera), primarily in soil (Chilopoda and Oribatida) or at the interface (Araneae and Carabidae). Our results show that trait diversity of arthropod communities is not primarily reduced by intense local land use, but is rather affected by differences between land-use types. Communities of Auchenorrhyncha and Chilopoda had significantly lower trait diversity in grassland habitats as compared to forests. Carabidae showed the opposite pattern with higher trait diversity in grasslands. Grasslands had a lower proportion of large Auchenorrhyncha and Carabidae individuals, whereas Chilopoda and Heteroptera individuals were larger in grasslands. Body size decreased with land-use intensity across taxa, but only in grasslands. The proportion of individuals with low mobility declined with land-use intensity in Araneae and Auchenorrhyncha, but increased in Chilopoda and grassland Heteroptera. The proportion of carnivorous individuals increased with land-use intensity in Heteroptera in forests and in Oribatida and Carabidae in grasslands. Our results suggest that gradients in management intensity across land-use types will not generally reduce trait diversity in multiple taxa, but will exert strong trait filtering within individual taxa. The observed patterns for trait filtering in individual taxa are not related to major classifications into above- and below-ground species. Instead, ecologically different taxa resembled each other in their trait diversity and compositional responses to land-use differences. These previously undescribed patterns offer an opportunity to develop management strategies for the conservation of trait diversity across taxonomic groups in permanent grassland and forest habitats.

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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Biodiversity exploratories, Biotic homogenization, Ecological filters, Ecosystem functioning, Environmental filtering, Forest, Grassland, Soil animals, Trait composition, Trait diversity
in
Journal of Animal Ecology
volume
86
issue
3
pages
511 - 520
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • scopus:85014262153
  • pmid:28118484
  • wos:000398826400011
ISSN
0021-8790
DOI
10.1111/1365-2656.12641
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
7ad85b46-6289-4f4e-a007-aa5c36d2541e
date added to LUP
2017-03-15 14:28:41
date last changed
2024-04-14 07:50:39
@article{7ad85b46-6289-4f4e-a007-aa5c36d2541e,
  abstract     = {{<p>Along with the global decline of species richness goes a loss of ecological traits. Associated biotic homogenization of animal communities and narrowing of trait diversity threaten ecosystem functioning and human well-being. High management intensity is regarded as an important ecological filter, eliminating species that lack suitable adaptations. Below-ground arthropods are assumed to be less sensitive to such effects than above-ground arthropods. Here, we compared the impact of management intensity between (grassland vs. forest) and within land-use types (local management intensity) on the trait diversity and composition in below- and above-ground arthropod communities. We used data on 722 arthropod species living above-ground (Auchenorrhyncha and Heteroptera), primarily in soil (Chilopoda and Oribatida) or at the interface (Araneae and Carabidae). Our results show that trait diversity of arthropod communities is not primarily reduced by intense local land use, but is rather affected by differences between land-use types. Communities of Auchenorrhyncha and Chilopoda had significantly lower trait diversity in grassland habitats as compared to forests. Carabidae showed the opposite pattern with higher trait diversity in grasslands. Grasslands had a lower proportion of large Auchenorrhyncha and Carabidae individuals, whereas Chilopoda and Heteroptera individuals were larger in grasslands. Body size decreased with land-use intensity across taxa, but only in grasslands. The proportion of individuals with low mobility declined with land-use intensity in Araneae and Auchenorrhyncha, but increased in Chilopoda and grassland Heteroptera. The proportion of carnivorous individuals increased with land-use intensity in Heteroptera in forests and in Oribatida and Carabidae in grasslands. Our results suggest that gradients in management intensity across land-use types will not generally reduce trait diversity in multiple taxa, but will exert strong trait filtering within individual taxa. The observed patterns for trait filtering in individual taxa are not related to major classifications into above- and below-ground species. Instead, ecologically different taxa resembled each other in their trait diversity and compositional responses to land-use differences. These previously undescribed patterns offer an opportunity to develop management strategies for the conservation of trait diversity across taxonomic groups in permanent grassland and forest habitats.</p>}},
  author       = {{Birkhofer, Klaus and Gossner, Martin M. and Diekötter, Tim and Drees, Claudia and Ferlian, Olga and Maraun, Mark and Scheu, Stefan and Weisser, Wolfgang W and Wolters, Volkmar and Wurst, Susanne and Zaitsev, Andrey S and Smith, Henrik G.}},
  issn         = {{0021-8790}},
  keywords     = {{Biodiversity exploratories; Biotic homogenization; Ecological filters; Ecosystem functioning; Environmental filtering; Forest; Grassland; Soil animals; Trait composition; Trait diversity}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{3}},
  pages        = {{511--520}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Journal of Animal Ecology}},
  title        = {{Land-use type and intensity differentially filter traits in above- and below-ground arthropod communities}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.12641}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/1365-2656.12641}},
  volume       = {{86}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}