Habitat area and edges affect the length of trophic chains in a fragmented forest

Author:

Cagnolo Luciano1ORCID,Bernaschini Laura1ORCID,Salvo Adriana1ORCID,Valladares Graciela1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biologı́a Vegetal Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientı́ficas y Técnicas Córdoba Argentina

Abstract

Abstract The food chain length represents how much energy reaches different trophic levels in food webs. Environmental changes derived from human activities have the potential to affect chain length. We explore how habitat area and edges affect chain length through: (1) a bottom‐up effect of abundance (‘pyramid hypothesis’); (2) the truncation of the highest trophic level (‘trophic‐rank hypothesis’); and (3) changes in species connectivity patterns (‘connectivity hypothesis’). We built plant‐leaf miner‐parasitoid food webs in 19 remnants of a fragmented Chaco forest from central Argentina. On each remnant, we constructed food webs from different locations at the forest interior and edges. For each food web, we registered the abundance of species, the species richness of each trophic level, estimated the connectivity of their networks, and the average food chain length. We used structural equation models to evaluate the direct and indirect effects of habitat area and edge/interior location on food chain length mediated by species richness, abundance and connectivity. We found no direct effects of habitat area on chain length but chains were longer at forest edges than at their interior. The three mechanisms were supported by our results, although they showed different strengths. First, we found that the interior favours a bottom‐up abundance effect from herbivores to parasitoids that positively affected chain length; second, we found that the forest area positively affects plant richness, which has a strong effect on the number of resources used by consumers, with a positive effect on chain length. Third, the remnant area and interior position favoured plant richness with a negative effect on the abundance of parasitoids, which had a positive effect on chain length. In general, the strongest effects on chain length were detected through changes in abundance rather than species richness although abundance was less affected by habitat fragmentation. We evaluated for the first time the effects of human‐driven habitat fragmentation on the length of trophic chains in highly diverse plant‐herbivore‐parasitoid networks. Despite the loss of species, small habitat fragments and edges embedded in the agricultural matrix can support interaction networks, making them conservation targets in managed landscapes.

Funder

Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas

National Geographic Society

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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