Biogeographic consequences of nutrient enrichment for plant-herbivore interactions in coastal wetlands

A major challenge in ecology is to understand broadscale trends in the impact of environmental change. We provide the first integrative analysis of the effects of eutrophication on plants, herbivores, and their interactions in coastal wetlands across latitudes. We show that fertilisation strongly in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecology letters 2015-05, Vol.18 (5), p.462-471
Hauptverfasser: He, Qiang, Silliman, Brian R.
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container_title Ecology letters
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creator He, Qiang
Silliman, Brian R.
description A major challenge in ecology is to understand broadscale trends in the impact of environmental change. We provide the first integrative analysis of the effects of eutrophication on plants, herbivores, and their interactions in coastal wetlands across latitudes. We show that fertilisation strongly increases herbivory in salt marshes, but not in mangroves, and that this effect increases with increasing latitude in salt marshes. We further show that stronger nutrient effects on plant nitrogen concentration at higher latitudes is the mechanism likely underlying this pattern. This biogeographic variation in nutrient effects on plant–herbivore interactions has consequences for vegetation, with those at higher latitudes being more vulnerable to consumer pressure fuelled by eutrophication. Our work provides a novel, mechanistic understanding of how eutrophication affects plant–herbivore systems predictably across broad latitudinal gradients, and highlights the power of incorporating biogeography into understanding large‐scale variability in the impacts of environmental change.
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subjects Animals
Biogeography
consumers
environmental change
Eutrophication
Fertilizers
Food Chain
Geography
Herbivory
intertidal wetlands
latitudinal gradients
macroecology
Nitrogen - analysis
Plants
top-down control
Wetlands
title Biogeographic consequences of nutrient enrichment for plant-herbivore interactions in coastal wetlands
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