Trophic dynamics in the fine-root based food web: integrating resource heterogeneity, root herbivores, and root foraging

Resources in the soil are heterogeneously distributed. We know that plant species differ in their root responses to nutrient patches and that these differences in foraging can influence plant competition. However, most studies of root-resource interactions overlook the potential top-down influence...

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Main Author: Stevens, Glen N.
Other Authors: Biology
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28168
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06302005-132048/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-281682020-09-26T05:33:39Z Trophic dynamics in the fine-root based food web: integrating resource heterogeneity, root herbivores, and root foraging Stevens, Glen N. Biology Jones, Robert H. Adler, Lynn S. Burger, James A. Valett, H. Maurice Lewis, Edwin E. white grubs nutrient heterogeneity root foraging root proliferation Resources in the soil are heterogeneously distributed. We know that plant species differ in their root responses to nutrient patches and that these differences in foraging can influence plant competition. However, most studies of root-resource interactions overlook the potential top-down influence of root herbivores. While root herbivores can influence plant community structure, the extent to which they influence ecosystem-scale factors such as net primary production is unclear. In addition, little is known regarding root herbivore foraging behaviors and, more importantly, whether these foraging behaviors can actually influence species interactions. In this dissertation, I present a conceptual model of soil-root-herbivore interactions in which soil resource heterogeneity structures both root dynamics and the abundance and influence of root herbivores. I conducted two field and one greenhouse experiment examining this proposed model. The dissertation includes an introductory chapter (Chapter 1), a field study examining root responses to manipulations of soil fertility and root herbivory (Chapter 2), a greenhouse study that used plant species responses to heterogeneity to develop predictions about the role of root herbivores in mixed-species neighborhoods (Chapter 3), and a field study of planted communities examining soil fertility and fauna effects on above- and belowground structure and function (Chapter 4). In all cases, there were significant effects of root herbivores on community structure and components of net primary production. Resource distribution had a strong effect in studies conducted in sandy, nutrient-poor soils (Chapter 2 and 3), but had a reduced effect in the study conducted at Kentland Farm in loamy soils (Chapter 4). Interactions between resource availability and root herbivory were common. These results support the theory that the potential benefit of resource-rich patches may be constrained by root herbivores. This research complements recent findings that demonstrate other potential costs of species foraging behaviors (such as exposure to soil anoxia and increased drought stress), as well as potential effects of root herbivores and other soil fauna on plant diversity. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:13:37Z 2014-03-14T20:13:37Z 2005-05-24 2005-06-30 2006-07-20 2005-07-20 Dissertation etd-06302005-132048 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28168 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06302005-132048/ StevensDissertationRevisions0713.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic white grubs
nutrient heterogeneity
root foraging
root proliferation
spellingShingle white grubs
nutrient heterogeneity
root foraging
root proliferation
Stevens, Glen N.
Trophic dynamics in the fine-root based food web: integrating resource heterogeneity, root herbivores, and root foraging
description Resources in the soil are heterogeneously distributed. We know that plant species differ in their root responses to nutrient patches and that these differences in foraging can influence plant competition. However, most studies of root-resource interactions overlook the potential top-down influence of root herbivores. While root herbivores can influence plant community structure, the extent to which they influence ecosystem-scale factors such as net primary production is unclear. In addition, little is known regarding root herbivore foraging behaviors and, more importantly, whether these foraging behaviors can actually influence species interactions. In this dissertation, I present a conceptual model of soil-root-herbivore interactions in which soil resource heterogeneity structures both root dynamics and the abundance and influence of root herbivores. I conducted two field and one greenhouse experiment examining this proposed model. The dissertation includes an introductory chapter (Chapter 1), a field study examining root responses to manipulations of soil fertility and root herbivory (Chapter 2), a greenhouse study that used plant species responses to heterogeneity to develop predictions about the role of root herbivores in mixed-species neighborhoods (Chapter 3), and a field study of planted communities examining soil fertility and fauna effects on above- and belowground structure and function (Chapter 4). In all cases, there were significant effects of root herbivores on community structure and components of net primary production. Resource distribution had a strong effect in studies conducted in sandy, nutrient-poor soils (Chapter 2 and 3), but had a reduced effect in the study conducted at Kentland Farm in loamy soils (Chapter 4). Interactions between resource availability and root herbivory were common. These results support the theory that the potential benefit of resource-rich patches may be constrained by root herbivores. This research complements recent findings that demonstrate other potential costs of species foraging behaviors (such as exposure to soil anoxia and increased drought stress), as well as potential effects of root herbivores and other soil fauna on plant diversity. === Ph. D.
author2 Biology
author_facet Biology
Stevens, Glen N.
author Stevens, Glen N.
author_sort Stevens, Glen N.
title Trophic dynamics in the fine-root based food web: integrating resource heterogeneity, root herbivores, and root foraging
title_short Trophic dynamics in the fine-root based food web: integrating resource heterogeneity, root herbivores, and root foraging
title_full Trophic dynamics in the fine-root based food web: integrating resource heterogeneity, root herbivores, and root foraging
title_fullStr Trophic dynamics in the fine-root based food web: integrating resource heterogeneity, root herbivores, and root foraging
title_full_unstemmed Trophic dynamics in the fine-root based food web: integrating resource heterogeneity, root herbivores, and root foraging
title_sort trophic dynamics in the fine-root based food web: integrating resource heterogeneity, root herbivores, and root foraging
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28168
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06302005-132048/
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