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      Functional and phylogenetic diversity of woody plants drive herbivory in a highly diverse forest

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          Abstract

          1. Biodiversity loss may alter ecosystem processes, such as herbivory, a key driver of ecological functions in species-rich (sub)tropical forests. However, the mechanisms underlying such biodiversity effects remain poorly explored, as mostly effects of species richness – a very basic biodiversity measure – have been studied. Here, we analyze to what extent the functional and phylogenetic diversity of woody plant communities affect herbivory along a diversity gradient in a subtropical forest.

          2. We assessed the relative effects of morphological and chemical leaf traits and of plant phylogenetic diversity on individual-level variation in herbivory of dominant woody plant species across 27 forest stands in south-east China.

          3. Individual-level variation in herbivory was best explained by multivariate, community-level diversity of leaf chemical traits, in combination with community-weighted means of single traits and species-specific phylodiversity measures. These findings deviate from those based solely on trait variation within individual species.

          4. Our results indicate a strong impact of generalist herbivores and highlight the need to assess food-web specialization to determine the direction of biodiversity effects. With increasing plant species loss, but particularly with the concomitant loss of functional and phylogenetic diversity in these forests, the impact of herbivores will probably decrease – with consequences for the herbivore-mediated regulation of ecosystem functions.

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          Diversity and dissimilarity coefficients: A unified approach

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            Using Phylogenetic, Functional and Trait Diversity to Understand Patterns of Plant Community Productivity

            Background Two decades of research showing that increasing plant diversity results in greater community productivity has been predicated on greater functional diversity allowing access to more of the total available resources. Thus, understanding phenotypic attributes that allow species to partition resources is fundamentally important to explaining diversity-productivity relationships. Methodology/Principal Findings Here we use data from a long-term experiment (Cedar Creek, MN) and compare the extent to which productivity is explained by seven types of community metrics of functional variation: 1) species richness, 2) variation in 10 individual traits, 3) functional group richness, 4) a distance-based measure of functional diversity, 5) a hierarchical multivariate clustering method, 6) a nonmetric multidimensional scaling approach, and 7) a phylogenetic diversity measure, summing phylogenetic branch lengths connecting community members together and may be a surrogate for ecological differences. Although most of these diversity measures provided significant explanations of variation in productivity, the presence of a nitrogen fixer and phylogenetic diversity were the two best explanatory variables. Further, a statistical model that included the presence of a nitrogen fixer, seed weight and phylogenetic diversity was a better explanation of community productivity than other models. Conclusions Evolutionary relationships among species appear to explain patterns of grassland productivity. Further, these results reveal that functional differences among species involve a complex suite of traits and that perhaps phylogenetic relationships provide a better measure of the diversity among species that contributes to productivity than individual or small groups of traits.
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              Tree diversity reduces herbivory by forest insects.

              Biodiversity loss from plant communities is often acknowledged to affect primary production but little is known about effects on herbivores. We conducted a meta-analysis of a worldwide data set of 119 studies to compare herbivory in single-species and mixed forests. This showed a significant reduction of herbivory in more diverse forests but this varied with the host specificity of insects. In diverse forests, herbivory by oligophagous species was virtually always reduced, whereas the response of polyphagous species was variable. Further analyses revealed that the composition of tree mixtures may be more important than species richness per se because diversity effects on herbivory were greater when mixed forests comprised taxonomically more distant tree species, and when the proportion of non-host trees was greater than that of host trees. These findings provide new support for the role of biodiversity in ecosystem functioning across trophic levels.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                New Phytol
                New Phytol
                nph
                The New Phytologist
                BlackWell Publishing Ltd (Oxford, UK )
                0028-646X
                1469-8137
                May 2014
                24 January 2014
                : 202
                : 3
                : 864-873
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Institute of Ecology, Leuphana University Lüneburg Scharnhorststr. 1, D-21335, Lüneburg, Germany
                [2 ]Institute of Biology/Geobotany and Botanical Garden, University of Halle Am Kirchtor 1, D-06108, Halle, Germany
                [3 ]German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig Deutscher Platz 5e, D-04103, Leipzig, Germany
                [4 ]Department of Community Ecology, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research – UFZ Theodor-Lieser-Str. 4, D-06120, Halle, Germany
                Author notes
                Author for correspondence:, Andreas Schuldt, Tel: +49 4131 6772965, Email: schuldt@ 123456uni.leuphana.de
                Article
                10.1111/nph.12695
                4235298
                24460549
                4c35d72a-14f7-4103-b45d-598b810b3593
                © 2014 The Authors. New Phytologist © 2014 New Phytologist Trust

                This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 16 October 2013
                : 16 December 2013
                Categories
                Research

                Plant science & Botany
                bef-china,biodiversity,ecosystem functioning,functional traits,negative density dependence,plant–insect interactions,species richness

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