Bargerveen Foundation, Toernooiveld 1, 6525 ED, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Department of Animal Ecology and Physiology, Radboud University Nijmegen, Heyendaalseweg 135, 6525 AJ, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2023 Oct;98(5):1712-1731. doi: 10.1111/brv.12972. Epub 2023 Jun 2.
Nitrogen (N) deposition has increased substantially since the second half of the 20th century due to human activities. This increase of reactive N into the biosphere has major implications for ecosystem functioning, including primary production, soil and water chemistry and producer community structure and diversity. Increased N deposition is also linked to the decline of insects observed over recent decades. However, we currently lack a mechanistic understanding of the effects of high N deposition on individual fitness, species richness and community structure of both invertebrate and vertebrate consumers. Here, we review the effects of N deposition on producer-consumer interactions, focusing on five existing ecological frameworks: C:N:P ecological stoichiometry, trace element ecological stoichiometry, nutritional geometry, essential micronutrients and allelochemicals. We link reported N deposition-mediated changes in producer quality to life-history strategies and traits of consumers, to gain a mechanistic understanding of the direction of response in consumers. We conclude that high N deposition influences producer quality via eutrophication and acidification pathways. This makes oligotrophic poorly buffered ecosystems most vulnerable to significant changes in producer quality. Changes in producer quality between the reviewed frameworks are often interlinked, complicating predictions of the effects of high N deposition on producer quality. The degree and direction of fitness responses of consumers to changes in producer quality varies among species but can be explained by differences in life-history traits and strategies, particularly those affecting species nutrient intake regulation, mobility, relative growth rate, host-plant specialisation, ontogeny and physiology. To increase our understanding of the effects of N deposition on these complex mechanisms, the inclusion of life-history traits of consumer species in future study designs is pivotal. Based on the reviewed literature, we formulate five hypotheses on the mechanisms underlying the effects of high N deposition on consumers, by linking effects of nutritional ecological frameworks to life-history strategies. Importantly, we expect that N-deposition-mediated changes in producer quality will result in a net decrease in consumer community as well as functional diversity. Moreover, we anticipate an increased risk of outbreak events of a small subset of generalist species, with concomitant declines in a multitude of specialist species. Overall, linking ecological frameworks with consumer life-history strategies provides a mechanistic understanding of the impacts of high N deposition on producer-consumer interactions, which can inform management towards more effective mitigation strategies.
氮(N)沉积自 20 世纪后半叶以来由于人类活动而大幅增加。这种活性氮向生物圈的增加对生态系统功能有重大影响,包括初级生产、土壤和水化学以及生产者群落结构和多样性。增加的氮沉积也与近几十年来观察到的昆虫数量减少有关。然而,我们目前缺乏对高氮沉积对无脊椎动物和脊椎动物消费者个体适应性、物种丰富度和群落结构影响的机制理解。在这里,我们回顾了氮沉积对生产者-消费者相互作用的影响,重点关注五个现有的生态框架:C:N:P 生态化学计量学、痕量元素生态化学计量学、营养几何、必需微量元素和化感物质。我们将报告的氮沉积介导的生产者质量变化与消费者的生活史策略和特征联系起来,以获得对消费者响应方向的机制理解。我们得出的结论是,高氮沉积通过富营养化和酸化途径影响生产者质量。这使得贫营养、缓冲能力差的生态系统最容易受到生产者质量显著变化的影响。所审查的框架之间的生产者质量变化常常相互关联,这使得很难预测高氮沉积对生产者质量的影响。消费者对生产者质量变化的适应性反应的程度和方向因物种而异,但可以用生活史特征和策略的差异来解释,特别是那些影响物种营养摄入调节、移动性、相对生长率、寄主植物特化、个体发育和生理学的特征和策略。为了提高我们对氮沉积对这些复杂机制的影响的理解,在未来的研究设计中纳入消费者物种的生活史特征是至关重要的。基于已审查的文献,我们通过将营养生态框架的影响与生活史策略联系起来,提出了五个关于高氮沉积对消费者影响的机制假设。重要的是,我们预计高氮沉积介导的生产者质量变化将导致消费者群落以及功能多样性的净减少。此外,我们预计一小部分普通物种的爆发事件的风险会增加,同时伴随着许多特化物种的减少。总的来说,将生态框架与消费者生活史策略联系起来,可以提供对高氮沉积对生产者-消费者相互作用影响的机制理解,从而为更有效的缓解策略提供信息。