Abstract

ABSTRACTIn focusing on how organisms' generalizable functional properties (traits) interact mechanistically with environments across spatial scales and levels of biological organization, trait‐based approaches provide a powerful framework for attaining synthesis, generality and prediction. Trait‐based research has considerably improved understanding of the assembly, structure and functioning of plant communities. Further advances in ecology may be achieved by exploring the trait–environment relationships of non‐sessile, heterotrophic organisms such as terrestrial arthropods, which are geographically ubiquitous, ecologically diverse, and often important functional components of ecosystems. Trait‐based studies and trait databases have recently been compiled for groups such as ants, bees, beetles, butterflies, spiders and many others; however, the explicit justification, conceptual framework, and primary‐evidence base for the burgeoning field of ‘terrestrial arthropod trait‐based ecology’ have not been well established. Consequently, there is some confusion over the scope and relevance of this field, as well as a tendency for studies to overlook important assumptions of the trait‐based approach. Here we aim to provide a broad and accessible overview of the trait‐based ecology of terrestrial arthropods. We first define and illustrate foundational concepts in trait‐based ecology with respect to terrestrial arthropods, and justify the application of trait‐based approaches to the study of their ecology. Next, we review studies in community ecology where trait‐based approaches have been used to elucidate how assembly processes for terrestrial arthropod communities are influenced by niche filtering along environmental gradients (e.g. climatic, structural, and land‐use gradients) and by abiotic and biotic disturbances (e.g. fire, floods, and biological invasions). We also review studies in ecosystem ecology where trait‐based approaches have been used to investigate biodiversity–ecosystem function relationships: how the functional diversity of arthropod communities relates to a host of ecosystem functions and services that they mediate, such as decomposition, pollination and predation. We then suggest how future work can address fundamental assumptions and limitations by investigating trait functionality and the effects of intraspecific variation, assessing the potential for sampling methods to bias the traits and trait values observed, and enhancing the quality and consolidation of trait information in databases. A roadmap to guide observational trait‐based studies is also presented. Lastly, we highlight new areas where trait‐based studies on terrestrial arthropods are well positioned to advance ecological understanding and application. These include examining the roles of competitive, non‐competitive and (multi‐)trophic interactions in shaping coexistence, and macro‐scaling trait–environment relationships to explain and predict patterns in biodiversity and ecosystem functions across space and time. We hope this review will spur and guide future applications of the trait‐based framework to advance ecological insights from the most diverse eukaryotic organisms on Earth.

Highlights

  • Biodiversity is often described exclusively in terms of the distinct taxonomic entities which it contains, and measured in terms of its taxonomic component, taxonomic diversity

  • In measuring the diversity of traits and trait values, trait-based approaches measure the functional component of biodiversity, functional diversity (Díaz & Cabido, 2001; Petchey & Gaston, 2006; Violle et al, 2007)

  • Most progress has been witnessed in plant ecology, where trait-based approaches are widely employed to investigate the processes underlying patterns of species coexistence (Cornwell & Ackerly, 2009; Kunstler et al, 2016) and biodiversity and ecosystem function (BEF) relationships (Cadotte, Carscadden & Mirotchnick, 2011; Faucon, Houben & Lambers, 2017)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Biodiversity is often described exclusively in terms of the distinct taxonomic entities (species) which it contains, and measured in terms of its taxonomic component, taxonomic diversity (e.g. species richness). Much of the existing research on terrestrial arthropods has applied trait-based approaches to investigate community assembly within the context of ecological filters (Keddy, 1992; Shipley, Vile & Garnier, 2006; see examples in Section II., and Brousseau et al, 2018a); only a minority (19%) of these clearly postulated hypotheses linking traits, their functions, and the studied environmental filters (Brousseau et al, 2018a) Other such studies are limited to describing correlations between trait values and environmental properties (Brousseau et al, 2018a). In addition to the relative success of trait-based plant ecology, significant limitations of the functional group approach lent impetus to the current ascent of terrestrial arthropod trait-based ecology

CURRENT TRAIT-BASED STUDIES ON TERRESTRIAL ARTHROPODS
HOW CAN TRAIT-BASED STUDIES ADDRESS OUTSTANDING ASSUMPTIONS AND LIMITATIONS?
NEW FRONTIERS FOR TERRESTRIAL ARTHROPOD TRAIT-BASED ECOLOGY
Findings
CONCLUSIONS
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