4.7 Article

A unified framework for herbivore-to-producer biomass ratio reveals the relative influence of four ecological factors

Journal

COMMUNICATIONS BIOLOGY
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s42003-020-01587-9

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) [15H02642, 16H02522, 20H03315, 16K18618, 16H04846, 18H02509]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [20H03315, 16K18618, 15H02642, 18H02509] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The study examined the influence of four factors (production rate, defense traits, nutrient contents of producers, and predation) on the biomass ratio of herbivores to primary producers, finding that all factors have significant effects on the biomass ratio in freshwater plankton communities, with carnivore abundance having the greatest relative influence.
The biomass ratio of herbivores to primary producers reflects the structure of a community. Four primary factors have been proposed to affect this ratio, including production rate, defense traits and nutrient contents of producers, and predation by carnivores. However, identifying the joint effects of these factors across natural communities has been elusive, in part because of the lack of a framework for examining their effects simultaneously. Here, we develop a framework based on Lotka-Volterra equations for examining the effects of these factors on the biomass ratio. We then utilize it to test if these factors simultaneously affect the biomass ratio of freshwater plankton communities. We found that all four factors contributed significantly to the biomass ratio, with carnivore abundance having the greatest effect, followed by producer stoichiometric nutrient content. Thus, the present framework should be useful for examining the multiple factors shaping various types of communities, both aquatic and terrestrial. Takehiro Kazama et al. develop a framework based on Lotka-Volterra models to identify the relative influences of production rate, defense traits, nutrient contents of producers, and predation, in affecting the biomass ratio of herbivores to primary producers in a community. They apply this framework to freshwater plankton systems and find that while all factors affect the biomass ratio, carnivore abundance has the greatest relative influence.

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