Abstract
Alpine ecosystems are important globally with high levels of endemic and rare species. Given that they will be highly impacted by climate change, understanding biotic factors that maintain diversity is critical. Silene acaulis is a common alpine nurse plant shown to positively influence the diversity and abundance of organisms–predominantly other plant species. The hypothesis that cushion or nurse plants in general are important to multiple trophic levels has been proposed but rarely tested. Alpine arthropod diversity is also largely understudied worldwide, and the plant-arthropod interactions reported are mostly negative, that is,. herbivory. Plant and arthropod diversity and abundance were sampled on S. acaulis and at paired adjacent microsites with other non-cushion forming vegetation present on Whistler Mountain, B.C., Canada to examine the relative trophic effects of cushion plants. Plant species richness and abundance but not Simpson’s diversity index was higher on cushion microsites relative to other vegetation. Arthropod richness, abundance, and diversity were all higher on cushion microsites relative to other vegetated sites. On a microclimatic scale, S. acaulis ameliorated stressful conditions for plants and invertebrates living inside it, but the highest levels of arthropod diversity were observed on cushions with tall plant growth. Hence, alpine cushion plants can be foundation species not only for other plant species but other trophic levels, and these impacts are expressed through both direct and indirect effects associated with altered environmental conditions and localized productivity. Whilst this case study tests a limited subset of the membership of alpine animal communities, it clearly demonstrates that cushion-forming plant species are an important consideration in understanding resilience to global changes for many organisms in addition to other plants.
Highlights
Facilitation, or positive interactions between organisms that benefit at least one species and are harmful to neither, is relatively common in most plant communities [1,2] and frequent in stressful climates [3,4]
In the journal ‘Arthropod-Plant Interactions’, 65% of all articles published described negative impacts of arthropods on plants such as parasitism and herbivory, 24% focused on pollinators, 10% dealt with global concerns such as diversity, climate change, and technological advances, whilst only 1% of all articles published described positive interactions between arthropods and plants
We propose that the logical first step in developing novel implications to these theories is to identify and document the positive interactions between taxa including more than one trophic level
Summary
Facilitation, or positive interactions between organisms that benefit at least one species and are harmful to neither, is relatively common in most plant communities [1,2] and frequent in stressful climates [3,4]. Processes such as facilitation integral to community assembly are important to consider in light of current ecological issues such as global change, biodiversity, and ecosystem sustainability because biotic interactions may change their impacts. Communities in an ecological-change context are comprised of plants, microbes, and invertebrates It is critical for the field of facilitation to incorporate other trophic levels. We propose that the logical first step in developing novel implications to these theories is to identify and document the positive interactions between taxa including more than one trophic level
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