Publication Details

Category Text Publication
Reference Category Journals
DOI 10.1111/1365-2745.13801
Licence creative commons licence
Title (Primary) Nutrient enrichment increases invertebrate herbivory and pathogen damage in grasslands
Author Ebeling, A.; Strauss, A.T.; Adler, P.; Arnillas, C.A.; Barrio, I.C.; Biedermann, L.A.; Borer, E.T.; Bugalho, M.N.; Caldeira, M.C.; Cadotte, M.W.; Daleo, P.; Eisenhauer, N.; Eskelinen, A.; Fay, P.A.; Firn, J.; Graff, P.; Hagenah, N.; Haider, S.; Komatsu, K.J.; McCulley, R.L.; Mitchell, C.E.; Moore, J.; Pascual, J.; Peri, P.L.; Power, S.A.; Prober, S.M.; Risch, A.C.; Roscher, C.; Sankaran, M.; Seabloom, E.W.; Schielzeth, H.; Schütz, M.; Speziale, K.L.; Tedder, M.; Virtanen, R.; Blumenthal, D.M.
Source Titel Journal of Ecology
Year 2022
Department iDiv; PHYDIV
Volume 110
Issue 2
Page From 327
Page To 339
Language englisch
Topic T5 Future Landscapes
Data and Software links https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.gf1vhhmqs
Supplements https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/action/downloadSupplement?doi=10.1111%2F1365-2745.13801&file=jec13801-sup-0001-Supinfo.docx
Keywords fungi; grasslands; insects; nitrogen; Nutrient network; phosphorus; precipitation gradient; temperature gradient
Abstract
  1. Plant damage by invertebrate herbivores and pathogens influences the dynamics of grassland ecosystems, but anthropogenic changes in nitrogen and phosphorus availability can modify these relationships.
  2. Using a globally-distributed experiment, we describe leaf damage on 153 plant taxa from twenty-seven grasslands worldwide, under ambient conditions and with experimentally elevated nitrogen and phosphorus.
  3. Invertebrate damage significantly increased with nitrogen addition, especially in grasses and non-leguminous forbs. Pathogen damage increased with nitrogen in grasses and legumes but not forbs. Effects of phosphorus were generally weaker. Damage was higher in grasslands with more precipitation, but climatic conditions did not change effects of nutrients on leaf damage. On average, invertebrate damage was relatively higher on legumes and pathogen damage was relatively higher on grasses. Community-weighted mean damage reflected these functional group patterns, with no effects of N on community-weighted pathogen damage (due to opposing responses of grasses and forbs) but stronger effects of N on community-weighted invertebrate damage (due to consistent responses of grasses and forbs).
  4. Synthesis: As human-induced inputs of nitrogen and phosphorus continue to increase, understanding their impacts on invertebrate and pathogen damage becomes increasingly important. Our results demonstrate that eutrophication frequently increases plant damage and that damage increases with precipitation across a wide array of grasslands. Invertebrate and pathogen damage in grasslands is likely to increase in the future, with potential consequences for plant, invertebrate and pathogen communities, as well as the transfer of energy and nutrients across trophic levels.
Persistent UFZ Identifier https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=25279
Ebeling, A., Strauss, A.T., Adler, P., Arnillas, C.A., Barrio, I.C., Biedermann, L.A., Borer, E.T., Bugalho, M.N., Caldeira, M.C., Cadotte, M.W., Daleo, P., Eisenhauer, N., Eskelinen, A., Fay, P.A., Firn, J., Graff, P., Hagenah, N., Haider, S., Komatsu, K.J., McCulley, R.L., Mitchell, C.E., Moore, J., Pascual, J., Peri, P.L., Power, S.A., Prober, S.M., Risch, A.C., Roscher, C., Sankaran, M., Seabloom, E.W., Schielzeth, H., Schütz, M., Speziale, K.L., Tedder, M., Virtanen, R., Blumenthal, D.M. (2022):
Nutrient enrichment increases invertebrate herbivory and pathogen damage in grasslands
J. Ecol. 110 (2), 327 - 339 10.1111/1365-2745.13801