| Literature DB >> 23825795 |
Abstract
Long-standing ecological theory proposes that diverse communities of plants should experience a decrease in herbivory. Yet previous empirical examinations of this hypothesis have revealed that plant species richness increases herbivory in just as many systems as it decreases it. In this study, I ask whether more insight into the role of plant diversity in promoting or suppressing herbivory can be gained by incorporating information about the evolutionary history of species in a community. In an old field system in southern Ontario, I surveyed communities of plants and measured levels of leaf damage on 27 species in 38 plots. I calculated a measure of phylogenetic diversity (PSE) that encapsulates information about the amount of evolutionary history represented in each of the plots and looked for a relationship between levels of herbivory and both species richness and phylogenetic diversity using a generalized linear mixed model (GLMM) that could account for variation in herbivory levels between species. I found that species richness was positively associated with herbivore damage at the plot-level, in keeping with the results from several other recent studies on this question. On the other hand, phylogenetic diversity was associated with decreased herbivory. Importantly, there was also an interaction between species richness and phylogenetic diversity, such that plots with the highest levels of herbivory were plots which had many species but only if those species tended to be closely related to one another. I propose that these results are the consequence of interactions with herbivores whose diets are phylogenetically specialized (for which I introduce the term cladophage), and how phylogenetic diversity may alter their realized host ranges. These results suggest that incorporating a phylogenetic perspective can add valuable additional insight into the role of plant diversity in explaining or predicting levels of herbivory at a whole-community scale.Entities:
Keywords: Biodiversity; Cladophage; Community ecology; Ecosystem function; Herbivory; Old fields; Phylogenetic diversity; Plant-Insect interactions
Year: 2013 PMID: 23825795 PMCID: PMC3698468 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.93
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Literature review of previous studies on the role of plant diversity in promoting or supressing herbivory.
Type refers to whether the species richness was manipulated (Experimental), natural species richness variation was taken advantage of (Observational), or the conclusion was based on estimates from previous literature (Meta-analysis). No study from the meta-analyses were repeated in this table. Consumer effect refers to whether the study estimated a measure of the amount of interaction between plants and consumers (Magnitude) – usually a damage measurement, or estimated the effect that interaction had on the plants’ fitness (Impact) – usually by measuring biomass in the presence or absence of herbivory. A positive relationship means that the study found that the magnitude or impact of herbivory increased with increasing plant diversity, a negative relationship means the study found that herbivory decreased with plant diversity. None means the study found no relationship between herbivory and plant diversity.
| Study | Type | Species richness range | Measured | Measured on effect | Consumer | Relationship |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Experimental | 1 vs. 16 | Leaf damage from generalists | 1 Legume sp | Magnitude | Positive |
|
| Experimental | 1, 2, 4, 8, 12 | Leaf damage | Community | Magnitude | Positive |
|
| Experimental | 1 vs. 3 | Leaf damage | 1 Rosea tree | Magnitude | Positive |
|
| Experimental | 3, 6, 18 | Leaf damage | 2 Conyza spp. | Magnitude | Positive |
|
| Experimental | 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, & 60 | Leaf damage | All species + 3 phytometer spp | Magnitude | Positive |
|
| Observational | 25–68 | Leaf damage | 10 tree spp | Magnitude | Positive |
|
| Meta-analysis | 1 vs. Several | Leaf damage | 2 tree spp (Oak & Alder) | Magnitude | Positive |
|
| Observational | 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 11 | #plants grazed by sheep | Community | Magnitude | Positive |
|
| Experimental | 3, 6, 12 | Leaf damage by Mollusks | All spp | Magnitude | No |
|
| Observational | Natural range across German deciduous forest | Leaf damage by insects | 2 Maple spp | Magnitude | No |
|
| Observational | Natural range across managed French forest | Leaf damage | 1 Oak sp. | Magnitude | No |
|
| Meta-analysis | 1 vs. Several | Leaf damage | Many individual spp. | Magnitude | Negative |
|
| Experimental | 1 vs. 16 | Leaf damage from specialists | 1 Legume sp | Magnitude | Negative |
|
| Experimental | 1 vs. 5 | Leaf damage | 1 Shorea sp | Magnitude | Negative |
|
| Observational | Natural range across Serengeti | % Biomass consumed | Community | Magnitude | Negative |
|
| Experimental | 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9 | Infestation by aphids | Community | Magnitude | Negative |
|
| Observational | Natural range across German deciduous forest | Leaf damage by insects | 1 Beech sp | Magnitude | Negative |
|
| Observational | 18–45 | Leaf damage | Many individual spp. | Magnitude | Negative |
|
| Meta-analysis | 1 vs. Several | Leaf damage by insects | 1 Birch sp | Magnitude | Negative |
|
| Experimental | 1–4 (manipulated Evenness) | Infestation by spittlebugs | Solidago canadensis | Magnitude | Negative |
|
| Experimental | 1, 2, 4, 8, 12 | Reduction of biomass in insecticide plots | Community | Impact | Positive |
|
| Experimental | 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 60 | % reduction of biomass in insect exclusions | Community | Impact | No |
|
| Meta-analysis | 1–60 | Absolute and % reduction of bio-mass in grazer exclusion | Community of phytoplankton | Impact | Negative |
|
| Experimental | 1, 2, 4, 6 | Reduction of biomass in Mollusk exclusions | Community | Impact | Negative |
|
| Experimental | 1 vs. 4 | Biomass consumed | Community of phytoplankton | Impact | Negative |
|
| Experimental | 1, 2, 4, 8, 32 | % reduction of biomass in insect exclusion | Community | Impact | Negative |
|
| Observational | 15–37 | % reduction of biomass in insect exclusions | Community | Impact | Negative |
Figure 1Phylogenetic tree with branch lengths representing all species in this study.
Species highlighted in grey are species for which herbivore damage measurements were taken. Branch lengths represent divergence times. Methods for generating the tree can be found in Dinnage (2009).
Figure 2Species-level herbivory of the 27 species for which herbivore damage measurements were taken.
On the left is the phylogenetic relationships of the species with branch length representing time since divergence. On the right is a bar chart whose bars represent the best linear unbiased predictors (BLUPs) or conditional modes of the estimated proportional leaf damage for each species. Error bars are based on the conditional variance-covariance matrix generated by the model fitting procedure (lmer function in the lme4 package for R) and are conditional mode + /− 1 conditional standard deviation.
Figure 3Two figures showing the relationship between estimated proportional leaf damage and plot-level plant species richness and phylogenetic diversity.
(A) Points represent best linear unbiased predictors (BLUPs) or conditional modes of plots. The size of the points is proportional to the species richness of the plot so that large points are speciose communities. Error bars are based on the conditional variance-covariance matrix generated by the model fitting procedure (lmer function in the lme4 package for R) and are conditional mode + /− 1 conditional standard deviation. Fitted lines are back-transformed predicted values from the full generalized linear mixed model, for four different pre-set values of species richness (3, 6, 12, & 17) representing the full range of species richnesses in this study. (B) A heatmap which shows the back-transformed fitted surface of the full generalized linear mixed model. Points are the plot BLUPs, their colour represents their value as per the legend. Points that are darker than the surrounding colour fall below the predicted surface; points which are lighter fall above it.
Statistics for the fixed effects.
Statistics for the fixed effects in a generalized linear mixed model (GLMM) with binomial family and logit link. P r(|z| < |z|) is the p-value generated from a parametric bootstrap on the z values.
| Parameter | Name of factor | Estimate | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| α | Intercept | 0.15 | ||
| β | Sampling date | 0.10 | 1.05 | 0.334 |
| β | Plant species richness | 0.23 | 2.26 | 0.042 |
| β | Plant phylogenetic diversity (PSE) | −0.19 | −2.10 | 0.055 |
| β | Plant diversity interaction | −0.28 | −2.27 | 0.043 |
Notes.
z value is significant at the alpha = 0.05 level.