Insect herbivory shapes functional diversity of trees in a tropical
biodiversity hotspot
Abstract
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Herbivory is one of the main biotic processes modulating plant diversity
and productivity. In tropical forests, insects may remove up to 30% of
total leaf biomass, but the effects on vegetation structure/productivity
and biodiversity are poorly understood. Insect herbivory might promote
or suppress plant growth, first reducing the photosynthetic area but
also providing a rather direct path from nutrients in leaves to the
plant-available soil pool. In this study, we used a trait-based Dynamic
Global Vegetation Model (LPJ-GUESS-NTD), parameterized with unique field
data from a tropical mountain forest gradient in southern Ecuador, to
analyze how observed leaf-trait dependent insect herbivory influences
the functional diversity and productivity of vegetation. According to
the model, insect herbivory decreases net primary production by 6% and
vegetation carbon storage by 26%. Herbivory also causes a vegetation
community trait shift related to the leaf and wood economic spectrum,
since with it specific leaf area (SLA) is reduced by 34% and wood
specific gravity (WSG) increases by 10% respectively. This
herbivory-induced change implies a shift towards a vegetation community
with more conservative growth strategies, with negative effects on
litter quality and nutrient availability. Accordingly, and in contrast
to our expectations, herbivory reduces nutrient availability in the
model. Finally, the inclusion of herbivory re-enforces gradients in
nutrient availability and increases the community trait dissimilarity
across altitudes (beta diversity). Our results suggest that insect
herbivory has profound negative impacts on vegetation productivity and
biomass in our study area, partly driven through feedbacks between soil
processes and changes in plant traits. Furthermore, insect herbivory
might be an important factor in shaping vegetation functional diversity.