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  3. Ambient and substrate energy influence decomposer diversity differentially across trophic levels.
 

Ambient and substrate energy influence decomposer diversity differentially across trophic levels.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/182403
Date of Publication
July 2023
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Ökologie...

Contributor
Kriegel, Peter
Vogel, Sebastian
Angeleri, Romain
Institut für Ökologie und Evolution (IEE)
Baldrian, Petr
Borken, Werner
Bouget, Christophe
Brin, Antoine
Bussler, Heinz
Cocciufa, Cristiana
Feldmann, Benedikt
Gossner, Martin M
Haeler, Elena
Hagge, Jonas
Hardersen, Sönke
Hartmann, Henrik
Hjältén, Joakim
Kotowska, Martyna M
Lachat, Thibault
Larrieu, Laurent
Leverkus, Alexandro B
Macagno, Anna L M
Mitesser, Oliver
Müller, Jörg
Obermaier, Elisabeth
Parisi, Francesco
Pelz, Stefan
Schuldt, Bernhard
Seibold, Sebastian
Stengel, Elisa
Sverdrup-Thygeson, Anne
Weisser, Wolfgang
Thorn, Simon
Subject(s)

500 - Science::570 - ...

Series
Ecology letters
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1461-0248
Publisher
Wiley
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1111/ele.14227
PubMed ID
37156097
Uncontrolled Keywords

Europe biodiversity c...

Description
The species-energy hypothesis predicts increasing biodiversity with increasing energy in ecosystems. Proxies for energy availability are often grouped into ambient energy (i.e., solar radiation) and substrate energy (i.e., non-structural carbohydrates or nutritional content). The relative importance of substrate energy is thought to decrease with increasing trophic level from primary consumers to predators, with reciprocal effects of ambient energy. Yet, empirical tests are lacking. We compiled data on 332,557 deadwood-inhabiting beetles of 901 species reared from wood of 49 tree species across Europe. Using host-phylogeny-controlled models, we show that the relative importance of substrate energy versus ambient energy decreases with increasing trophic levels: the diversity of zoophagous and mycetophagous beetles was determined by ambient energy, while non-structural carbohydrate content in woody tissues determined that of xylophagous beetles. Our study thus overall supports the species-energy hypothesis and specifies that the relative importance of ambient temperature increases with increasing trophic level with opposite effects for substrate energy.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/166991
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Ecology_Letters_-_2023_-_Kriegel_-_Ambient_and_substrate_energy_influence_decomposer_diversity_differentially_across.pdftextAdobe PDF14.42 MBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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