Antagonistic biotic interactions mitigate the positive effects of warming on wood decomposition.

IF 2.3 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ECOLOGY Oecologia Pub Date : 2024-12-04 DOI:10.1007/s00442-024-05640-w
Robert J Warren, Paul T Frankson, Jacqueline E Mohan, Mark A Bradford, Joshua King
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Abstract

Global change drivers such as habitat fragmentation, species invasion, and climate warming can act synergistically upon native systems; however, global change drivers can be neutralized if they induce antagonistic interactions in ecological communities. Deadwood comprises a considerable portion of forest carbon, and it functions as refuge, nesting habitat and nutrient source for plant, animal and microbial communities. We predicted that thermophilic termites would increase wood decomposition with experimental warming and in forest edge habitat. Alternately, given that predatory ants also are thermophilic, they might limit termite-mediated decomposition regardless of warming. In addition, we predicted that a non-native, putative termite-specialist ant species would decrease termite activity, and consequently decomposition, when replacing native ants. We tested these hypotheses using experimental warming plots (~ 2.5 °C above ambient) where termites, and their ant predators, have full access and vary in abundance at microscales. We found that termite activity was the strongest control on decomposition of field wood assays, with mass loss increasing 20% with each doubling of termite activity. However, both native and non-native ant abundance increased with experimental warming and, in turn, appeared to equally limit termite activity and, consequently, reduced wood decomposition rates. As a result, experimental warming had little net effect on the decomposition rates-likely because, although termite activity increased somewhat in warmed plots, ant abundances increased more than five times as much. Our results suggest that, in temperate southern U.S. forests, the negative top-down effects of predatory ants on termites outweighed the potential positive influences of warming on termite-driven wood decomposition rates.

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拮抗生物相互作用减轻了变暖对木材分解的积极影响。
生境破碎化、物种入侵和气候变暖等全球变化驱动因素可协同作用于本地系统;然而,如果全球变化驱动因素在生态群落中引起拮抗作用,则可以被抵消。枯木是森林碳的重要组成部分,是植物、动物和微生物群落的避难所、筑巢地和营养来源。我们预测,随着实验升温,在森林边缘生境中,嗜热白蚁会增加木材的分解。另外,考虑到掠食性蚂蚁也是嗜热的,它们可能会限制白蚁介导的分解,而不管变暖。此外,我们预测,当取代本地蚂蚁时,非本地的,假定的白蚁专家蚂蚁物种将减少白蚁的活动,从而导致白蚁分解。我们使用实验升温样地(高于环境温度~ 2.5°C)对这些假设进行了测试,在这些样地中,白蚁和它们的蚂蚁捕食者可以完全进入,并且在微观尺度上丰度不同。研究发现,白蚁活性对田间木材分解的控制作用最强,白蚁活性每增加一倍,质量损失增加20%。然而,随着实验变暖,本地和非本地蚂蚁的丰度都增加了,反过来,似乎同样限制了白蚁的活动,从而降低了木材的分解率。结果,实验变暖对分解率的净影响很小——可能是因为,尽管白蚁的活动在变暖的地块上有所增加,但蚂蚁的丰度却增加了五倍多。我们的研究结果表明,在美国南部温带森林中,掠食性蚂蚁对白蚁自上而下的负面影响超过了变暖对白蚁驱动的木材分解率的潜在积极影响。
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来源期刊
Oecologia
Oecologia 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
192
审稿时长
5.3 months
期刊介绍: Oecologia publishes innovative ecological research of international interest. We seek reviews, advances in methodology, and original contributions, emphasizing the following areas: Population ecology, Plant-microbe-animal interactions, Ecosystem ecology, Community ecology, Global change ecology, Conservation ecology, Behavioral ecology and Physiological Ecology. In general, studies that are purely descriptive, mathematical, documentary, and/or natural history will not be considered.
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