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Trophic interactions and the relationship between species diversity and ecosystem stability.

Authors :
Thébault E
Loreau M
Source :
The American naturalist [Am Nat] 2005 Oct; Vol. 166 (4), pp. E95-114. Date of Electronic Publication: 2005 Aug 05.
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

Several theoretical studies propose that biodiversity buffers ecosystem functioning against environmental fluctuations, but virtually all of these studies concern a single trophic level, the primary producers. Changes in biodiversity also affect ecosystem processes through trophic interactions. Therefore, it is important to understand how trophic interactions affect the relationship between biodiversity and the stability of ecosystem processes. Here we present two models to investigate this issue in ecosystems with two trophic levels. The first is an analytically tractable symmetrical plant-herbivore model under random environmental fluctuations, while the second is a mechanistic ecosystem model under periodic environmental fluctuations. Our analysis shows that when diversity affects net species interaction strength, species interactions--both competition among plants and plant-herbivore interactions--have a strong impact on the relationships between diversity and the temporal variability of total biomass of the various trophic levels. More intense plant competition leads to a stronger decrease or a lower increase in variability of total plant biomass, but plant-herbivore interactions always have a destabilizing effect on total plant biomass. Despite the complexity generated by trophic interactions, biodiversity should still act as biological insurance for ecosystem processes, except when mean trophic interaction strength increases strongly with diversity.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1537-5323
Volume :
166
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The American naturalist
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
16224699
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1086/444403