martes, 2 de julio de 2019
Subsidy type and quality determine direction and strength of trophic cascades in arthropod food web in agro‐ecosystems
Laura G.A. Riggi and Riccardo Bommarco
1.The subsidy hypothesis states that communities receiving nutrient
subsidies will demonstrate top‐down trophic cascades where predators
indirectly increase plant biomass. This has been both confirmed and
refuted, which might depend on whether the subsidy has mainly targeted
the plant or the detrital food‐web compartment, and on the subsidy
quality. This is particularly poorly understood for terrestrial
communities such as heavily subsidized agroecosystems.
2.Using cages covering 4 m2 of ground in a long‐term
agricultural fertilisation experiment, we tested whether subsidies
targeting the detrital soil meso‐fauna compartment with organic
fertilisers, or the plants with mineral fertiliser, impacted the
direction and strength of trophic cascades in an arthropod‐plant food
web. We expected top‐down controls of generalist arthropod predators
(spiders, ground and rove beetles) on aphid densities to be stronger in
organically fertilised plots due to enhanced alternative prey
availability in the soil. Bottom‐up control from barley quality on
aphids was anticipated to be stronger in the mineral treatments. We
examined how the quality (decomposability) of the organic subsidy
governed the cascades by comparing treatments with labile (manure) and
recalcitrant (hay) organic matter.
3.Top‐down forces dominated in food webs receiving organic
subsidies, while bottom‐up forces dominated under mineral fertilisation.
A high quality, easily degradable organic subsidy propagated faster
through the food chain, leading to a top‐down trophic cascade with
generalist predators having a positive effect on plant biomass in the
labile but not in the recalcitrant organic treatment.
4.Synthesis and applications. Management of agricultural
soils that bolster the soil meso‐fauna, e.g. adding organic
fertilisers, has potential to increase top‐down biological control by
naturally occurring generalist arthropod predators. Our research
demonstrates how barley biomass can be enhanced in manure treatment in
the presence of arthropod predators to a level comparable to that of
mineral fertiliser.
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