Rainforest conversion to plantations fundamentally alters energy fluxes and functions in canopy arthropod food webs

Author:

Pollierer Melanie M.1ORCID,Drescher Jochen1ORCID,Potapov Anton1ORCID,Kasmiatun 2,Mawan Amanda1ORCID,Mutiari Mega2,Nazarreta Rizky2,Hidayat Purnama2,Buchori Damayanti23,Scheu Stefan14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Animal Ecology, J.‐F. Blumenbach Institute for Zoology and Anthropology University of Göttingen Göttingen Germany

2. Department of Plant Protection, Faculty of Agriculture Bogor Agricultural University Bogor Indonesia

3. Center for Transdisciplinary and Sustainability Sciences IPB University Bogor West Java Indonesia

4. Centre of Biodiversity and Sustainable Land Use Göttingen Germany

Abstract

AbstractTropical rainforests around the world are rapidly being converted into cash crop agricultural systems. The associated massive losses of plant and animal species lead to changes in arthropod food webs and the energy fluxes therein. These changes are poorly understood, in particular in the extremely biodiverse canopies of tropical ecosystems. Using canopy fogging followed by stable isotope and energy flux analyses, we show that land‐use conversion from rainforest to rubber and oil palm plantations not only causes a drastic reduction in energy fluxes of up to 75%, but also shifts fluxes among trophic groups. While rainforest featured high levels of both herbivory and algae‐microbivory, and a balanced ratio of herbivory to predation, relative fluxes were shifted towards predation in rubber and towards herbivory in oil palm plantations, indicating profound shifts in ecosystem functioning. Our results highlight that the ongoing loss of animal biodiversity and biomass in tropical canopies degrades animal‐driven functions and restructures canopy food webs.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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