4.2 Article Proceedings Paper

Identifying the Relative Importance of Leaf versus Shredder Species Loss on Litter Decomposition in Streams

Journal

INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF HYDROBIOLOGY
Volume 94, Issue 4, Pages 452-471

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/iroh.200811157

Keywords

ecosystem function; functional diversity; leaf litter decomposition; multi-trophic diversity; species richness

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Understanding how species loss influences ecosystem function is a contemporary issue in ecology. However, most research has focused on species loss at one trophic-level. We explored the relationship between functional diversity (FD) and species richness separately for trees and aquatic leaf-shredding detritivores. For trees, we collected information on species-specific leaf tissue chemistry and species co-occurrences in the mid-Atlantic region (USA). For shredders, we used a published trait database with information on communities from 38 streams in the same region. We used a clustering algorithm to estimate FD for each community and for randomly assembled communities. If FD was high, we concluded that species loss was important to change in function; if low, species were functionally redundant and insensitive to species loss. We found tree FD to be significantly different than expected, but shredders exhibited FD levels similar to patterns based on random assembly. Furthermore, there were more leaf species exclusively associated with very high or very low levels of functional diversity compared to shredders. This approach revealed greater implications for leaf than shredder species loss for litter breakdown.

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