Reciprocal bark exchange helps to disentangle tree species dependent bark and wood trait effects on invertebrate diversity
1. Previous studies showed that bark cover at early-decay stage had profound control on the invertebrate assemblages of bark and wood, with possible consequence for the decomposition process. However, previous experimental designs could not disentangle how bark versus wood traits affect the inverteb...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Previous studies showed that bark cover at early-decay stage had
profound control on the invertebrate assemblages of bark and wood, with
possible consequence for the decomposition process. However, previous
experimental designs could not disentangle how bark versus wood traits
affect the invertebrate assemblage process in bark and/or wood separately
because wood traits of different tree species may vary independently from
bark traits. Furthermore, we do not know whether such tree species
specific bark trait effects are still influential at mid-decay stage. 2.
To unravel whether and how bark and wood traits influence invertebrate
communities in tree logs at mid-decay stage, we introduce reciprocal bark
transplantation within pairs of different tree species as a new method. We
applied this method to two pairs of phylogenetically contrasting species
of gymnosperms (pair I: Araucaria araucana and Cryptomeria japonica, pair
II: Picea abies and Thuja plicata) and another gymnosperm (Chamaecyparis
lawsoniana) set as disturbance control to test for potential bark
manipulation artefacts on invertebrate community composition. 3. Our bark
exchange experiment revealed that both bark and wood host abundant and
divergent subsets of invertebrates on mid-decay logs of different tree
species. We further documented that the invertebrate community composition
was predominantly shaped by the traits of host tissue per se, while also
being significantly but less strongly affected by the traits of the other
tissue, i.e. the adjacent bark or wood. Our results indicated that bark
trait effects faded with time and how long bark trait effects persist
greatly depends on bark thickness. 4. Synthesis. Our study suggests that
maintaining deadwood heterogeneity related to variation between tree
species, and to bark versus wood, is important for nursing a large
biodiversity of invertebrates. Combined with bark removal methodology, our
bark exchange method can be further extended to more decay stages and more
forest biomes to track bark trait effects and bark induced priority
effects on deadwood decomposition, and its associated invertebrate and
microbial communities. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.7h44j0zxw |