Bähner K W, Zweig K A, Leal I R, Wirth R
Plant Ecology and Systematics,University of Kaiserslautern,P.O. Box 3049, 67663 Kaiserslautern,Germany.
Graph Theory & Complex Network Analysis,University of Kaiserslautern,P.O. Box 3049, 67663 Kaiserslautern,Germany.
Bull Entomol Res. 2017 Oct;107(5):563-572. doi: 10.1017/S0007485317000062. Epub 2017 Feb 10.
Forest fragmentation and climate change are among the most severe and pervasive forms of human impact. Yet, their combined effects on plant-insect herbivore interaction networks, essential components of forest ecosystems with respect to biodiversity and functioning, are still poorly investigated, particularly in temperate forests. We addressed this issue by analysing plant-insect herbivore networks (PIHNs) from understories of three managed beech forest habitats: small forest fragments (2.2-145 ha), forest edges and forest interior areas within three continuous control forests (1050-5600 ha) in an old hyper-fragmented forest landscape in SW Germany. We assessed the impact of forest fragmentation, particularly edge effects, on PIHNs and the resulting differences in robustness against climate change by habitat-wise comparison of network topology and biologically realistic extinction cascades of networks following scores of vulnerability to climate change for the food plant species involved. Both the topological network metrics (complexity, nestedness, trophic niche redundancy) and robustness to climate change strongly increased in forest edges and fragments as opposed to the managed forest interior. The nature of the changes indicates that human impacts modify network structure mainly via host plant availability to insect herbivores. Improved robustness of PIHNs in forest edges/small fragments to climate-driven extinction cascades was attributable to an overall higher thermotolerance across plant communities, along with positive effects of network structure. The impoverishment of PIHNs in managed forest interiors and the suggested loss of insect diversity from climate-induced co-extinction highlight the need for further research efforts focusing on adequate silvicultural and conservation approaches.
森林破碎化和气候变化是人类影响最为严重且普遍的形式。然而,它们对植物 - 昆虫食草动物相互作用网络(森林生态系统中生物多样性和功能的重要组成部分)的综合影响仍未得到充分研究,尤其是在温带森林中。我们通过分析德国西南部一片古老的高度破碎化森林景观中三个经营的山毛榉林栖息地林下的植物 - 昆虫食草动物网络(PIHNs)来解决这个问题:小型森林片段(2.2 - 145公顷)、森林边缘以及三个连续对照森林(1050 - 5600公顷)内的森林内部区域。我们通过按栖息地比较网络拓扑结构以及根据所涉及的食用植物物种对气候变化的脆弱性得分来对网络进行生物学上现实的灭绝级联分析,评估了森林破碎化,特别是边缘效应,对PIHNs的影响以及由此产生的对气候变化的抗性差异。与经营的森林内部相比,森林边缘和片段的拓扑网络指标(复杂性、嵌套性、营养生态位冗余)以及对气候变化的抗性都显著增加。变化的性质表明,人类影响主要通过昆虫食草动物可利用的寄主植物来改变网络结构。森林边缘/小片段中PIHNs对气候驱动的灭绝级联的抗性增强归因于整个植物群落总体上较高的耐热性以及网络结构的积极影响。经营的森林内部PIHNs的 impoverishment以及气候诱导的共同灭绝导致昆虫多样性的潜在丧失凸显了进一步开展研究工作的必要性,重点是适当的造林和保护方法。 (注:原文中“impoverishment”此处直接保留英文未翻译,可能是特定术语或拼写有误,若按正常理解可译为“ impoverishment”为“ impoverishment”为“贫困化”,这里结合语境推测可能是指PIHNs的某种退化或减少等意思,因不确定准确含义故保留英文。)