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A brown-world cascade in the dung decomposer food web of an alpine meadow: Effects of predator interactions and warming

机译:高寒草甸粪便分解食物网中的棕色世界级联:捕食者相互作用和变暖的影响

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Top-down control has been extensively documented in food webs based on living plants, where predator limitation of herbivores can cascade to facilitate plant growth (the green-world hypothesis), particularly in grasslands and aquatic systems. Yet the ecosystem role of predators in detrital food webs is less explored, as is the potential effect of climate warming on detritus-based communities. We here show that predators have a "brown-world" role in decomposer communities via a cascading top-down control on plant growth, based on the results of an experiment that factorially manipulated presence and size of two predator species as well as temperature (warmed vs. unwarmed). The inclusion of predatory beetles significantly decreased abundance of coprophagous beetles and thus the rate of dung decomposition and productivity of plants growing surrounding the dung. Moreover, the magnitude of these decreases differed between predator species and, for dung loss, was temperature dependent. At ambient temperature, the larger predators tended to more strongly influence the dung loss rate than did the smaller predators; when both predators were present, the dung loss rate was higher relative to the treatments with the smaller predators but comparable to those with the larger ones, suggesting an antagonistic effect of predator interaction. However, warming substantially reduced dung decomposition rates and eliminated the effects of predation on dung decomposition. Although warming substantially decreased dung loss rates, warming only modestly reduced primary productivity. Consistent with these results, a second experiment exploring the influence of the two predator species and warming on dung loss over time revealed that predatory beetles significantly decreased the abundance of coprophagous beetles, which was positively correlated with dung loss rates. Moreover, experimental warming decreased the water content of dung and hence the survival of coprophagous beetles. These results confirm that the "brown-world" effect of predator beetles was due to cascading top-down control through coprophagous beetles to nutrient cycling and primary productivity. Our results also highlight potentially counterintuitive effects of climate warming. For example, global warming might significantly decrease animalmediated decomposition of organic matter and recycling of nutrients in a future warmed world.
机译:自上而下的控制已广泛记录在以活植物为基础的食物网中,食草动物的捕食者限制可以级联以促进植物生长(绿色世界假说),特别是在草原和水生系统中。但是,鲜有捕食者在碎屑食物网中的生态系统作用以及气候变暖对基于碎屑的社区的潜在影响的研究较少。我们在此显示,掠夺性动物通过分解控制植物生长的自上而下的自上而下的控制,在分解者社区中扮演“棕色世界”的角色,该实验基于对两个掠食者物种的存在和大小以及温度(温暖vs.未受热)。包含掠食性甲虫会显着降低共食甲虫的丰度,从而降低粪便分解的速度和在粪便周围生长的植物的生产力。而且,这些减少的幅度在不同的捕食者之间是不同的,并且,由于粪便的损失,这取决于温度。在环境温度下,较大的食肉动物比较小的食肉动物对粪便损失率的影响更大。当两种捕食者同时存在时,粪便的流失率相对于较小捕食者的处理较高,但与较大捕食者的粪便损失相当,表明捕食者相互作用具有拮抗作用。但是,升温大大降低了粪便的分解速度,并消除了捕食对粪便分解的影响。尽管变暖大大降低了粪便流失率,但变暖仅适度降低了初级生产力。与这些结果一致,第二个实验探讨了两种捕食者物种和变暖对粪便流失的影响,这表明掠食性甲虫显着降低了共食甲虫的丰度,这与粪便流失率呈正相关。此外,实验性增温降低了粪便的水分含量,因此降低了共食甲虫的生存。这些结果证实,捕食性甲虫的“棕色世界”效应是由于通过共生甲虫对养分循环和初级生产力的级联自上而下的控制所致。我们的结果还凸显了气候变暖的潜在反直觉效应。例如,在未来变暖的世界中,全球变暖可能会大大减少动物介导的有机物分解和营养物质的循环利用。

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