Insectivorous birds and bats outperform ants in the top‐down regulation of arthropods across strata of a Japanese temperate forest

Author:

Sivault Elise12ORCID,Kollross Jan12,Jorge Leonardo Re12ORCID,Finnie Sam12,Diez‐Méndez David12,Fernandez Garzon Sara12,Maraia Heveakore12ORCID,Lenc Jan12,Libra Martin1,Murakami Masashi3,Nakaji Tatsuro4,Nakamura Masahiro5,Sreekar Rachakonda16ORCID,Sam Legi1,Abe Tomokazu3,Weiss Matthias12,Sam Katerina12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biology Centre of the Czech Academy of Sciences Institute of Entomology Ceske Budejovice Czech Republic

2. Faculty of Science University of South Bohemia Ceske Budejovice Czech Republic

3. Faculty of Science Chiba University Chiba Japan

4. Sapporo Experimental Forest, Field Science Center for Northern Biosphere Hokkaido University Sapporo Japan

5. Tomakomai Experimental Forest, Field Science Center for Northern Biosphere Hokkaido University Sapporo Japan

6. Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science, School of Environment The University of Queensland Saint Lucia Queensland Australia

Abstract

Abstract Birds, bats and ants are recognised as significant arthropod predators. However, empirical studies reveal inconsistent trends in their relative roles in top‐down control across strata. Here, we describe the differences between forest strata in the separate effects of birds, bats and ants on arthropod densities and their cascading effects on plant damage. We implemented a factorial design to exclude vertebrates and ants in both the canopy and understorey. Additionally, we separately excluded birds and bats from the understorey using diurnal and nocturnal exclosures. At the end of the experiments, we collected all arthropods and assessed herbivory damage. Arthropods responded similarly to predator exclusion across forest strata, with a density increase of 81% on trees without vertebrates and 53% without both vertebrates and ants. Additionally, bird exclusion alone led to an 89% increase in arthropod density, while bat exclusion resulted in a 63% increase. Herbivory increased by 42% when vertebrates were excluded and by 35% when both vertebrates and ants were excluded. Bird exclusion alone increased herbivory damage by 28%, while the exclusion of bats showed a detectable but non‐significant increase (by 22%). In contrast, ant exclusion had no significant effect on arthropod density or herbivory damage across strata. Our results reveal that the effects of birds and bats on arthropod density and herbivory damage are similar between the forest canopy and understorey in this temperate forest. In addition, ants were not found to be significant predators in our system. Furthermore, birds, bats and ants appeared to exhibit antagonistic relationships in influencing arthropod density. These findings highlight, unprecedentedly, the equal importance of birds and bats in maintaining ecological balance across different strata of a temperate forest.

Funder

H2020 European Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Reference127 articles.

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