Chen Jing-Ting, Wang Ming-Qiang, Luo Arong, Zhang Feng, Chesters Douglas, Liu Shanlin, Li Yi, von Oheimb Goddert, Kunz Matthias, Zhou Qing-Song, Bruelheide Helge, Liu Xiao-Juan, Ma Ke-Ping, Schuldt Andreas, Zhu Chao-Dong
CAS State Key Laboratory of Animal Biodiversity Conservation and Integrated Pest Management (SKLA2501), Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
College of Biological Sciences, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
J Anim Ecol. 2025 Oct;94(10):2035-2046. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.70103. Epub 2025 Jul 7.
The bottom-up effect of producers and the top-down effect of predators are well-known factors shaping community assembly and ecosystem functioning through trophic interactions. Communities differing in their functional composition may induce ecological effects with varying directions and intensities, but previous studies in highly diverse ecosystems have struggled with reliably quantifying these interactions at the community level. We used spider gut-content metabarcoding in a subtropical tree diversity experiment to examine the impact of multiple diversity components of both trees and spiders on prey diversity and the network structure of predator-prey interactions. Our findings reveal that prey richness and spider-prey network structure are simultaneously driven by the bottom-up effects of tree communities and the top-down effects of the spider communities. When categorized by hunting modes, the drivers of prey richness and network structure differed between spider guilds. Large phylogenetic and functional differences within web-building spider communities promoted coexistence, leading to increases in the utilized prey richness, generality, niche overlap and prey vulnerability. For hunting spiders, the effects of vertical tree structure complexity indicated restricted mobility but facilitated coexistence through increased shelter availability, and a concomitant reduction of prey richness and dietary breadth. Our study underscores the significance of integrating multiple diversity components and considering functional trait composition across trophic levels when analysing the ecological effects of generalist predators. Our findings enable a better understanding of how predator-prey interaction patterns may be altered under current environmental changes that result in biodiversity loss.
生产者的自下而上效应和捕食者的自上而下效应是通过营养相互作用塑造群落组装和生态系统功能的众所周知的因素。功能组成不同的群落可能会引发方向和强度各异的生态效应,但此前在高度多样化生态系统中的研究一直难以在群落层面可靠地量化这些相互作用。我们在一个亚热带树木多样性实验中使用蜘蛛肠道内容物代谢条形码技术,来研究树木和蜘蛛的多种多样性成分对猎物多样性以及捕食者 - 猎物相互作用网络结构的影响。我们的研究结果表明,猎物丰富度和蜘蛛 - 猎物网络结构同时受到树木群落的自下而上效应和蜘蛛群落的自上而下效应的驱动。按捕猎模式分类时,猎物丰富度和网络结构的驱动因素在不同蜘蛛类群之间存在差异。结网蜘蛛群落内部较大的系统发育和功能差异促进了共存,导致所利用的猎物丰富度、普遍性、生态位重叠和猎物易感性增加。对于游猎蜘蛛而言,垂直树木结构复杂性的影响表明其活动受限,但通过增加庇护所可用性促进了共存,同时伴随着猎物丰富度和食物广度的降低。我们的研究强调了在分析泛化捕食者的生态效应时整合多种多样性成分并考虑营养级间功能性状组成的重要性。我们的研究结果有助于更好地理解在当前导致生物多样性丧失的环境变化下,捕食者 - 猎物相互作用模式可能如何改变。