Literature DB >> 16958872

Herbivore control of annual grassland composition in current and future environments.

Halton A Peters, Elsa E Cleland, Harold A Mooney, Christopher B Field.   

Abstract

Selective consumption by herbivores influences the composition and structure of a range of plant communities. Anthropogenically driven global environmental changes, including increased atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO(2)), warming, increased precipitation, and increased N deposition, directly alter plant physiological properties, which may in turn modify herbivore consumption patterns. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that responses of annual grassland composition to global changes can be predicted exclusively from environmentally induced changes in the consumption patterns of a group of widespread herbivores, the terrestrial gastropods. This was done by: (1) assessing gastropod impacts on grassland composition under ambient conditions; (2) quantifying environmentally induced changes in gastropod feeding behaviour; (3) predicting how grassland composition would respond to global-change manipulations if influenced only by herbivore consumption preferences; and (4) comparing these predictions to observed responses of grassland community composition to simulated global changes. Gastropod herbivores consume nearly half of aboveground production in this system. Global changes induced species-specific changes in plant leaf characteristics, leading gastropods to alter the relative amounts of different plant types consumed. These changes in gastropod feeding preferences consistently explained global-change-induced responses of functional group abundance in an intact annual grassland exposed to simulated future environments. For four of the five global change scenarios, gastropod impacts explained > 50% of the quantitative changes, indicating that herbivore preferences can be a major driver of plant community responses to global changes.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16958872     DOI: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2005.00847.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecol Lett        ISSN: 1461-023X            Impact factor:   9.492


  4 in total

1.  Herbivory of an invasive slug in a model grassland community can be affected by earthworms and mycorrhizal fungi.

Authors:  Raphaël Trouvé; Thomas Drapela; Thomas Frank; Franz Hadacek; Johann G Zaller
Journal:  Biol Fertil Soils       Date:  2013-06-18       Impact factor: 6.432

2.  Plant species effects on soil macrofauna density in grassy arable fallows of different age.

Authors:  Jörg-Alfred Salamon; Janet Wissuwa; Stephan Jagos; Monika Koblmüller; Oxana Ozinger; Christine Winkler; Thomas Frank
Journal:  Eur J Soil Biol       Date:  2011-03       Impact factor: 2.846

3.  Climate warming increases biological control agent impact on a non-target species.

Authors:  Xinmin Lu; Evan Siemann; Minyan He; Hui Wei; Xu Shao; Jianqing Ding
Journal:  Ecol Lett       Date:  2014-11-07       Impact factor: 9.492

4.  High nutrient uptake efficiency and high water use efficiency facilitate the spread of Stellera chamaejasme L. in degraded grasslands.

Authors:  Lizhu Guo; Jiahuan Li; Wei He; Li Liu; Ding Huang; Kun Wang
Journal:  BMC Ecol       Date:  2019-12-04       Impact factor: 2.964

  4 in total

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