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Negative effects of forest gaps on dung removal in a full‐factorial experiment

Staab, Michael ; Achury, Rafael ; Ammer, Christian ; Ehbrecht, Martin ; Irmscher, Veronika ; Mohr, Hendrik ; Schall, Peter ; Weisser, Wolfgang W. ; Blüthgen, Nico (2022)
Negative effects of forest gaps on dung removal in a full‐factorial experiment.
In: Journal of Animal Ecology, 2022, 91 (10)
doi: 10.26083/tuprints-00022903
Article, Secondary publication, Publisher's Version

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Item Type: Article
Type of entry: Secondary publication
Title: Negative effects of forest gaps on dung removal in a full‐factorial experiment
Language: English
Date: 23 December 2022
Place of Publication: Darmstadt
Year of primary publication: 2022
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Journal or Publication Title: Journal of Animal Ecology
Volume of the journal: 91
Issue Number: 10
DOI: 10.26083/tuprints-00022903
Corresponding Links:
Origin: Secondary publication DeepGreen
Abstract:

1. Ecosystem functioning may directly or indirectly—via change in biodiversity—respond to land use. Dung removal is an important ecosystem function central for the decomposition of mammal faeces, including secondary seed dispersal and improved soil quality. Removal usually increases with dung beetle diversity and biomass. In forests, dung removal can vary with structural variables that are, however, often interrelated, making experiments necessary to understand the role of single variables on ecosystem functions. How gaps and deadwood, two main outcomes of forest management influence dung removal, is unknown. 2. We tested if dung removal responds to gap creation and deadwood provisioning or if treatment effects are mediated via responses of dung beetles. We expected lower removal rates in gaps due to lower dung beetle biomass and diversity. 3. We sampled dung beetles and measured dung removal in a highly‐replicated full‐factorial forest experiment established at 29 sites in three regions of Germany (treatments: Gap, Gap + Deadwood, Deadwood, Control). All gaps were experimentally created and had a diameter of around 30 m. 4. Dung beetle diversity, biomass and dung removal were each lower in gaps than in controls. Dung removal decreased from 61.9% in controls to 48.5% in gaps, irrespective of whether or not the gap had deadwood. This treatment effect was primarily driven by dung beetle biomass but not diversity. Furthermore, dung removal was reduced to 56.9% in the deadwood treatment. 5. Our findings are not consistent with complementarity effects of different dung beetle species linked to biodiversity‐ecosystem functioning relationships that have been shown in several ecosystems. In contrast, identity effects can be pronounced: gaps reduced the abundance of a large‐bodied key forest species (Anoplotrupes stercorosus), without compensatory recruitment of open land species. While gaps and deadwood are important for many forest organisms, dung beetles and dung removal respond negatively. Our results exemplify how experiments can contribute to test hypotheses on the interrelation between land use, biodiversity and ecosystem functioning.

Uncontrolled Keywords: biodiversity, deadwood, dung beetles, ecosystem functions, trophic interactions
Status: Publisher's Version
URN: urn:nbn:de:tuda-tuprints-229030
Classification DDC: 500 Science and mathematics > 570 Life sciences, biology
500 Science and mathematics > 580 Plants (botany)
500 Science and mathematics > 590 Animals (zoology)
Divisions: 10 Department of Biology > Ecological Networks
Date Deposited: 23 Dec 2022 13:13
Last Modified: 14 Nov 2023 19:05
SWORD Depositor: Deep Green
URI: https://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/id/eprint/22903
PPN: 50325035X
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