Literature DB >> 20426334

Nonnative grass litter enhances grazing arthropod assemblages by increasing native shrub growth.

Elizabeth M Wolkovich1.   

Abstract

Recent theory and research have highlighted how the brown (detritus-based) world may control the trophic structure of the green (grazing) world. Detritus can alter bottom-up control of green webs by affecting autotroph biomass and quality through its ability to alter ecosystem properties, including soil moisture and nutrient cycling. Additionally, the role of detritus as the food resource base of brown webs may subsidize omnivorous predators that can provide top-down control of green webs. Brown-green connections may be especially important following plant invasions, which often lead to increased detritus and altered food webs. I combine field experiments, observational data, and path analysis to understand how nonnative grasses impact native arthropod communities in a semiarid shrub system. Theory and correlative evidence predict that decreased shrub growth and nutritional quality, and increased feeding of detrital predators on the grazing web, would decrease the abundance of shrub arthropods. In contrast, I found nonnative litter increased shrub growth via increased soil moisture and produced a strong bottom-up increase of the grazing arthropod web; effects of detrital predators and plant quality were comparatively unimportant. I link these findings to the apparent lack of overlapping predators between the brown and green webs, and to the important abiotic role of litter in this xeric system, which increased native plants and the abundance and richness of arthropods on them.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20426334     DOI: 10.1890/09-0147.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  3 in total

1.  Increasing shrub damage by invertebrate herbivores in the warming and drying tundra of West Greenland.

Authors:  Rebecca Finger-Higgens; Melissa DeSiervo; Matthew P Ayres; Ross A Virginia
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2021-03-31       Impact factor: 3.225

2.  Indirect effects of habitat disturbance on invasion: nutritious litter from a grazing resistant plant favors alien over native Collembola.

Authors:  Hans Petter Leinaas; Jan Bengtsson; Charlene Janion-Scheepers; Steven L Chown
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2015-07-25       Impact factor: 2.912

3.  A test for clinal variation in Artemisia californica and associated arthropod responses to nitrogen addition.

Authors:  Maria M Meza-Lopez; Kailen A Mooney; Amanda L Thompson; Nicole K Ho; Jessica D Pratt
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-02-01       Impact factor: 3.752

  3 in total

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