Climate variability and aridity modulate the role of leaf shelters for arthropods: A global experiment

Archive ouverte

Romero, Gustavo, Q | Gonçalves‐souza, Thiago | Roslin, Tomas | Marquis, Robert, J | Marino, Nicholas, a C | Novotny, Vojtech | Cornelissen, Tatiana | Orivel, Jerome | Sui, Shen | Aires, Gustavo | Antoniazzi, Reuber | Dáttilo, Wesley | Breviglieri, Crasso, P B | Busse, Annika | Gibb, Heloise | Izzo, Thiago, J | Kadlec, Tomas | Kemp, Victoria | Kersch‐becker, Monica | Knapp, Michal | Kratina, Pavel | Luke, Rebecca | Majnarić, Stefan | Maritz, Robin | Mateus Martins, Paulo | Mendesil, Esayas | Michalko, Jaroslav | Mrazova, Anna | Novais, Samuel | Pereira, Cássio, C | Perić, Mirela, S | Petermann, Jana, S | Ribeiro, Sérvio, P | Sam, Katerina | Trzcinski, M, Kurtis | Vieira, Camila | Westwood, Natalie | Bernaschini, Maria, L | Carvajal, Valentina | González, Ezequiel | Jausoro, Mariana | Kaensin, Stanis | Ospina, Fabiola | Cristóbal‐pérez, E, Jacob | Quesada, Mauricio | Rogy, Pierre | Srivastava, Diane, S | Szpryngiel, Scarlett | Tack, Ayco, J M | Teder, Tiit | Videla, Martin | Viljur, Mari‐liis | Koricheva, Julia

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley -

International audience. Current climate change is disrupting biotic interactions and eroding biodiversity worldwide. However, species sensitive to aridity, high temperatures, and climate variability might find shelter in microclimatic refuges, such as leaf rolls built by arthropods. To explore how the importance of leaf shelters for terrestrial arthropods changes with latitude, elevation, and climate, we conducted a distributed experiment comparing arthropods in leaf rolls versus control leaves across 52 sites along an 11,790 km latitudinal gradient. We then probed the impact of short- versus long-term climatic impacts on roll use, by comparing the relative impact of conditions during the experiment versus average, baseline conditions at the site. Leaf shelters supported larger organisms and higher arthropod biomass and species diversity than non-rolled control leaves. However, the magnitude of the leaf rolls’ effect differed between long- and short-term climate conditions, metrics (species richness, biomass, and body size), and trophic groups (predators vs. herbivores). The effect of leaf rolls on predator richness was influenced only by baseline climate, increasing in magnitude in regions experiencing increased long-term aridity, regardless of latitude, elevation, and weather during the experiment. This suggests that shelter use by predators may be innate, and thus, driven by natural selection. In contrast, the effect of leaf rolls on predator biomass and predator body size decreased with increasing temperature, and increased with increasing precipitation, respectively, during the experiment. The magnitude of shelter usage by herbivores increased with the abundance of predators and decreased with increasing temperature during the experiment. Taken together, these results highlight that leaf roll use may have both proximal and ultimate causes. Projected increases in climate variability and aridity are, therefore, likely to increase the importance of biotic refugia in mitigating the effects of climate change on species persistence

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Subtle structures with not‐so‐subtle functions: A data set of arthropod constructs and their host plants

Archive ouverte | Pereira, Cássio, Cardoso | CCSD

International audience. The construction of shelters on plants by arthropods might influence other organisms via changes in colonization, community richness, species composition, and functionality. Arthropods, inclu...

Species niches, not traits, determine abundance and occupancy patterns: A multi‐site synthesis

Archive ouverte | Marino, Nicholas A. C. | CCSD

International audience. Aim: Locally abundant species are usually widespread, and this pattern has been related to properties of the niches and traits of species. However, such explanations fail to account for the p...

Search for top‐down and bottom‐up drivers of latitudinal trends in insect herbivory in oak trees in Europe

Archive ouverte | Valdés‐correcher, Elena | CCSD

International audience. Aim: The strength of species interactions is traditionally expected to increase toward the Equator. However, recent studies have reported opposite or inconsistent latitudinal trends in the bo...

Chargement des enrichissements...