4.8 Article

Resilience of ecosystem processes: a new approach shows that functional redundancy of biological control services is reduced by landscape simplification

Journal

ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 22, Issue 10, Pages 1568-1577

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ele.13347

Keywords

Agricultural intensification; biological pest control; ecosystem function; ecosystem service; exponential Shannon entropy; land use; pest; predator; resilience

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Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council FORMAS
  2. Centre for Biological Control at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Functional redundancy can increase the resilience of ecosystem processes by providing insurance against species loss and the effects of abundance fluctuations. However, due to the difficulty of assessing individual species' contributions and the lack of a metric allowing for a quantification of redundancy within communities, few attempts have been made to estimate redundancy for individual ecosystem processes. We present a new method linking interaction metrics with metabolic theory that allows for a quantification of redundancy at the level of ecosystem processes. Using this approach, redundancy in the predation on aphids and other prey by natural enemies across a landscape heterogeneity gradient was estimated. Functional redundancy of predators was high in heterogeneous landscapes, low in homogeneous landscapes and scaled with predator specialisation. Our approach allows quantifying functional redundancy within communities and can be used to assess the role of functional redundancy across a wide variety of ecosystem processes and environmental factors.

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