| Literature DB >> 29774660 |
Yoshikazu Kato1,2, Michio Kondoh3, Naoto F Ishikawa2,4, Hiroyuki Togashi5,6, Yukihiro Kohmatsu2,7, Mayumi Yoshimura8,9, Chikage Yoshimizu1,2, Takashi F Haraguchi1,2, Yutaka Osada1, Nobuhito Ohte10,11, Naoko Tokuchi6, Noboru Okuda1,2, Takeshi Miki12,13, Ichiro Tayasu1,2.
Abstract
Food-web complexity often hinders disentangling functionally relevant aspects of food-web structure and its relationships to biodiversity. Here, we present a theoretical framework to evaluate food-web complexity in terms of biodiversity. Food network unfolding is a theoretical method to transform a complex food web into a linear food chain based on ecosystem processes. Based on this method, we can define three biodiversity indices, horizontal diversity (DH ), vertical diversity (DV ) and range diversity (DR ), which are associated with the species diversity within each trophic level, diversity of trophic levels, and diversity in resource use, respectively. These indices are related to Shannon's diversity index (H'), where H' = DH + DV - DR . Application of the framework to three riverine macroinvertebrate communities revealed that D indices, calculated from biomass and stable isotope features, captured well the anthropogenic, seasonal, or other within-site changes in food-web structures that could not be captured with H' alone.Entities:
Keywords: Carbon and nitrogen stable isotope ratio; ecosystem functioning; food network unfolding; species diversity; trophic level; trophic position; trophic pyramid
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29774660 DOI: 10.1111/ele.12973
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecol Lett ISSN: 1461-023X Impact factor: 9.492