Parasites as ecosystem modulators: foliar pathogens suppress top‐down effects of large herbivores

Author:

Li Tianyun1ORCID,Zhong Zhiwei1ORCID,Pearson Dean E.23ORCID,Ortega Yvette K.2ORCID,Li Wenjun1,Li Yanan1,Zhu Hui1ORCID,Risch Anita C.4ORCID,Wang Deli1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Grassland Science, Key Laboratory of Vegetation Ecology, Ministry of Education/Jilin Songnen Grassland Ecosystem National Observation and Research Station Northeast Normal University Changchun 130024 China

2. Rocky Mountain Research Station USDA Forest Service 800 E. Beckwith Avenue Missoula MT 59801 USA

3. Division of Biological Sciences University of Montana 32 Campus Drive Missoula MT 59812 USA

4. Swiss Federal Institute for Forest Snow and Landscape Research WSL Zuercherstrasse 111 8903 Birmensdorf Switzerland

Abstract

Summary Parasites can catalyze or inhibit interactions between their hosts and other species, but the ecosystem‐level effects of such interaction modifications are poorly understood. We conducted a large‐scale field experiment in temperate grasslands of China to understand how foliar fungal pathogens influenced top‐down effects of cattle on plant diversity and productivity. When foliar pathogens were suppressed, cattle grazing strongly reduced biomass of the dominant grass, Leymus chinensis, generating competitive release that significantly increased community‐level species richness and evenness. In the absence of grazing, pathogen attack on L. chinensis had no measurable effect on host biomass. However, pathogens disrupted top‐down effects of herbivory by inhibiting grazing effects on plant biomass and species richness. Mechanistically, fungal pathogens were linked to increased alkaloid and reduced nitrogen levels in leaf tissue, which appeared to deter cattle grazing on L. chinensis. In conclusion, foliar pathogens can suppress top‐down effects of large herbivores on grassland community composition and ecosystem function by modifying the strength of their host's interactions with dominant consumers. Parasites may act as modulators of ecosystem function when their direct effects on host abundance are overshadowed by powerful influences on host traits that modify their interactions with competitors, herbivores, or predators.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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