| Literature DB >> 30963868 |
Luc Barbaro1,2, Eric Allan3, Evy Ampoorter4, Bastien Castagneyrol5, Yohan Charbonnier5, Hans De Wandeler6, Christian Kerbiriou2, Harriet T Milligan7, Aude Vialatte1, Monique Carnol8, Marc Deconchat1, Pallieter De Smedt4, Hervé Jactel5, Julia Koricheva7, Isabelle Le Viol2, Bart Muys6, Michael Scherer-Lorenzen9, Kris Verheyen4, Fons van der Plas10,11.
Abstract
Bats and birds are key providers of ecosystem services in forests. How climate and habitat jointly shape their communities is well studied, but whether biotic predictors from other trophic levels may improve bird and bat diversity models is less known, especially across large bioclimatic gradients. Here, we achieved multi-taxa surveys in 209 mature forests replicated in six European countries from Spain to Finland, to investigate the importance of biotic predictors (i.e. the abundance or activity of defoliating insects, spiders, earthworms and wild ungulates) for bat and bird taxonomic and functional diversity. We found that nine out of 12 bird and bat diversity metrics were best explained when biotic factors were added to models including climate and habitat variables, with a mean gain in explained variance of 38% for birds and 15% for bats. Tree functional diversity was the most important habitat predictor for birds, while bats responded more to understorey structure. The best biotic predictors for birds were spider abundance and defoliating insect activity, while only bat functional evenness responded positively to insect herbivory. Accounting for potential biotic interactions between bats, birds and other taxa of lower trophic levels will help to understand how environmental changes along large biogeographical gradients affect higher-level predator diversity in forest ecosystems.Entities:
Keywords: defoliating insects; earthworms; functional diversity; spiders; trophic interactions; ungulate browsing
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30963868 PMCID: PMC6367190 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2018.2193
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349