Background insect herbivory increases with local elevation but makes minor contribution to element cycling along natural gradients in the Subarctic

Abstract Herbivores can exert major controls over biogeochemical cycling. As invertebrates are highly sensitive to temperature shifts (ectothermal), the abundances of insects in high‐latitude systems, where climate warming is rapid, is expected to increase. In subarctic mountain birch forests, resea...

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Main Authors: Jeppe A. Kristensen, Anders Michelsen, Daniel B. Metcalfe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-10-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6803
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spelling doaj-c51a73e528e4460ca4ad64fb72aadae62021-04-02T19:24:16ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582020-10-011020116841169810.1002/ece3.6803Background insect herbivory increases with local elevation but makes minor contribution to element cycling along natural gradients in the SubarcticJeppe A. Kristensen0Anders Michelsen1Daniel B. Metcalfe2Department of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science Lund University Lund SwedenDepartment of Biology Terrestrial Ecology Section University of Copenhagen Copenhagen DenmarkDepartment of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science Lund University Lund SwedenAbstract Herbivores can exert major controls over biogeochemical cycling. As invertebrates are highly sensitive to temperature shifts (ectothermal), the abundances of insects in high‐latitude systems, where climate warming is rapid, is expected to increase. In subarctic mountain birch forests, research has focussed on geometrid moth outbreaks, while the contribution of background insect herbivory (BIH) to elemental cycling is poorly constrained. In northern Sweden, we estimated BIH along 9 elevational gradients distributed across a gradient in regional elevation, temperature, and precipitation to allow evaluation of consistency in local versus regional variation. We converted foliar loss via BIH to fluxes of C, nitrogen (N), and phosphorus (P) from the birch canopy to the soil to compare with other relevant soil inputs of the same elements and assessed different abiotic and biotic drivers of the observed variability. We found that leaf area loss due to BIH was ~1.6% on average. This is comparable to estimates from tundra, but considerably lower than ecosystems at lower latitudes. The C, N, and P fluxes from canopy to soil associated with BIH were 1–2 orders of magnitude lower than the soil input from senesced litter and external nutrient sources such as biological N fixation, atmospheric deposition of N, and P weathering estimated from the literature. Despite the minor contribution to overall elemental cycling in subarctic birch forests, the higher quality and earlier timing of the input of herbivore deposits to soils compared to senesced litter may make this contribution disproportionally important for various ecosystem functions. BIH increased significantly with leaf N content as well as local elevation along each transect, yet showed no significant relationship with temperature or humidity, nor the commonly used temperature proxy, absolute elevation. The lack of consistency between the local and regional elevational trends calls for caution when using elevation gradients as climate proxies.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6803carbon cyclingfast cycle versus slow cycleinsect herbivorynutrient cyclingspace‐for‐time substitutionSubarctic mountain birch forest
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeppe A. Kristensen
Anders Michelsen
Daniel B. Metcalfe
spellingShingle Jeppe A. Kristensen
Anders Michelsen
Daniel B. Metcalfe
Background insect herbivory increases with local elevation but makes minor contribution to element cycling along natural gradients in the Subarctic
Ecology and Evolution
carbon cycling
fast cycle versus slow cycle
insect herbivory
nutrient cycling
space‐for‐time substitution
Subarctic mountain birch forest
author_facet Jeppe A. Kristensen
Anders Michelsen
Daniel B. Metcalfe
author_sort Jeppe A. Kristensen
title Background insect herbivory increases with local elevation but makes minor contribution to element cycling along natural gradients in the Subarctic
title_short Background insect herbivory increases with local elevation but makes minor contribution to element cycling along natural gradients in the Subarctic
title_full Background insect herbivory increases with local elevation but makes minor contribution to element cycling along natural gradients in the Subarctic
title_fullStr Background insect herbivory increases with local elevation but makes minor contribution to element cycling along natural gradients in the Subarctic
title_full_unstemmed Background insect herbivory increases with local elevation but makes minor contribution to element cycling along natural gradients in the Subarctic
title_sort background insect herbivory increases with local elevation but makes minor contribution to element cycling along natural gradients in the subarctic
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract Herbivores can exert major controls over biogeochemical cycling. As invertebrates are highly sensitive to temperature shifts (ectothermal), the abundances of insects in high‐latitude systems, where climate warming is rapid, is expected to increase. In subarctic mountain birch forests, research has focussed on geometrid moth outbreaks, while the contribution of background insect herbivory (BIH) to elemental cycling is poorly constrained. In northern Sweden, we estimated BIH along 9 elevational gradients distributed across a gradient in regional elevation, temperature, and precipitation to allow evaluation of consistency in local versus regional variation. We converted foliar loss via BIH to fluxes of C, nitrogen (N), and phosphorus (P) from the birch canopy to the soil to compare with other relevant soil inputs of the same elements and assessed different abiotic and biotic drivers of the observed variability. We found that leaf area loss due to BIH was ~1.6% on average. This is comparable to estimates from tundra, but considerably lower than ecosystems at lower latitudes. The C, N, and P fluxes from canopy to soil associated with BIH were 1–2 orders of magnitude lower than the soil input from senesced litter and external nutrient sources such as biological N fixation, atmospheric deposition of N, and P weathering estimated from the literature. Despite the minor contribution to overall elemental cycling in subarctic birch forests, the higher quality and earlier timing of the input of herbivore deposits to soils compared to senesced litter may make this contribution disproportionally important for various ecosystem functions. BIH increased significantly with leaf N content as well as local elevation along each transect, yet showed no significant relationship with temperature or humidity, nor the commonly used temperature proxy, absolute elevation. The lack of consistency between the local and regional elevational trends calls for caution when using elevation gradients as climate proxies.
topic carbon cycling
fast cycle versus slow cycle
insect herbivory
nutrient cycling
space‐for‐time substitution
Subarctic mountain birch forest
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6803
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