Biology Department, Georgetown University, Washington, DC 20057, USA.
Ecology. 2010 Nov;91(11):3303-11. doi: 10.1890/09-1291.1.
Numerous studies have examined relationships between primary production and biodiversity at higher trophic levels. However, altered production in plant communities is often tightly linked with concomitant shifts in diversity and composition, and most studies have not disentangled the direct effects of production on consumers. Furthermore, when studies do examine the effects of plant production on animals in terrestrial systems, they are primarily confined to a subset of taxonomic or functional groups instead of investigating the responses of the entire community. Using natural monocultures of the salt marsh cordgrass Spartina alterniflora, we were able to examine the impacts of increased plant production, independent of changes in plant composition and/or diversity, on the trophic structure, composition, and diversity of the entire arthropod community. If arthropod species richness increased with greater plant production, we predicted that it would be driven by: (1) an increase in the number of rare species, and/or (2) an increase in arthropod abundance. Our results largely supported our predictions: species richness of herbivores, detritivores, predators, and parasitoids increased monotonically with increasing levels of plant production, and the diversity of rare species also increased with plant production. However, rare species that accounted for this difference were predators, parasitoids, and detritivores, not herbivores. Herbivore species richness could be simply explained by the relationship between abundance and diversity. Using nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) and analysis of similarity (ANOSIM), we also found significant changes in arthropod species composition with increasing levels of production. Our findings have important implications in the intertidal salt marsh, where human activities have increased nitrogen runoff into the marsh, and demonstrate that such nitrogen inputs cascade to affect community structure, diversity, and abundance in higher trophic levels.
许多研究都考察了初级生产力与更高营养级生物多样性之间的关系。然而,植物群落的生产力变化往往与多样性和组成的相应变化紧密相关,并且大多数研究未能厘清生产力对消费者的直接影响。此外,当研究确实考察植物生产力对陆地系统中动物的影响时,它们主要局限于分类或功能组的一个子集,而不是调查整个群落的反应。我们使用盐沼草 Spartina alterniflora 的天然单种群落,能够研究增加植物生产力对整个节肢动物群落的营养结构、组成和多样性的影响,而不考虑植物组成和/或多样性的变化。如果节肢动物物种丰富度随植物生产力的增加而增加,我们预测这将是由以下原因驱动的:(1)稀有物种数量的增加,和/或(2)节肢动物丰度的增加。我们的研究结果在很大程度上支持了我们的预测:草食动物、碎屑食动物、捕食者和寄生蜂的物种丰富度随着植物生产力的增加而单调增加,稀有物种的多样性也随着植物生产力的增加而增加。然而,导致这种差异的稀有物种是捕食者、寄生蜂和碎屑食动物,而不是草食动物。草食动物的物种丰富度可以用丰度和多样性之间的关系来简单解释。通过非度量多维尺度分析(NMDS)和相似性分析(ANOSIM),我们还发现随着生产力的增加,节肢动物的物种组成发生了显著变化。我们的研究结果在潮间带盐沼中具有重要意义,在那里人类活动增加了氮素流入沼泽,表明这种氮素输入会级联影响更高营养级的群落结构、多样性和丰度。