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Evolutionary history of grazing and resources determine herbivore exclusion effects on plant diversity

Authors :
Price, Jodi N
Sitters, Judith
Ohlert, Timothy
Tognetti, Pedro M
Brown, Cynthia S
Seabloom, Eric W
Borer, Elizabeth T
Prober, Suzanne M
Bakker, Elisabeth S
MacDougall, Andrew S
Yahdjian, Laura
Gruner, Daniel S
Olde Venterink, Harry
Barrio, Isabel C
Graff, Pamela
Bagchi, Sumanta
Arnillas, Carlos Alberto
Bakker, Jonathan D
Blumenthal, Dana M
Boughton, Elizabeth H
Brudvig, Lars A
Bugalho, Miguel N
Cadotte, Marc W
Caldeira, Maria C
Dickman, Chris R
Donohue, Ian
Grégory, Sonnier
Hautier, Yann
Jónsdóttir, Ingibjörg S
Lannes, Luciola S
McCulley, Rebecca L
Moore, Joslin L
Power, Sally A
Risch, Anita C
Schütz, Martin
Standish, Rachel
Stevens, Carly J
Veen, G F
Virtanen, Risto
Wardle, Glenda M
Sub Ecology and Biodiversity
Ecology and Biodiversity
Sub Ecology and Biodiversity
Ecology and Biodiversity
Aquatic Ecology (AqE)
Terrestrial Ecology (TE)
Source :
Nature Ecology and Evolution 6 (2022), Nature Ecology and Evolution, 6(9), 1290. Nature Publishing Group, Nature Ecology and Evolution, 6, 1290-1298, Nature Ecology and Evolution, 6(9), 1290-1298. Springer Science+Business Media
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Ecological models predict that the effects of mammalian herbivore exclusion on plant diversity depend on resource availability and plant exposure to ungulate grazing over evolutionary time. Using an experiment replicated in 57 grasslands on six continents, with contrasting evolutionary history of grazing, we tested how resources (mean annual precipitation and soil nutrients) determine herbivore exclusion effects on plant diversity, richness and evenness. Here we show that at sites with a long history of ungulate grazing, herbivore exclusion reduced plant diversity by reducing both richness and evenness and the responses of richness and diversity to herbivore exclusion decreased with mean annual precipitation. At sites with a short history of grazing, the effects of herbivore exclusion were not related to precipitation but differed for native and exotic plant richness. Thus, plant species’ evolutionary history of grazing continues to shape the response of the world’s grasslands to changing mammalian herbivory.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2397334X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Ecology and Evolution 6 (2022), Nature Ecology and Evolution, 6(9), 1290. Nature Publishing Group, Nature Ecology and Evolution, 6, 1290-1298, Nature Ecology and Evolution, 6(9), 1290-1298. Springer Science+Business Media
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9d16cb8ceb48ad0be602f292e3a73270