The iDiv Ecotron - a flexible research platform for multitrophic
biodiversity research
Abstract
Across the globe, ecological communities are confronted with multiple
global environmental change drivers, and they are responding in complex
ways ranging from behavioural, physiological, and morphological changes
within populations to changes in community composition and food web
structure with consequences for ecosystem functioning. A better
understanding of global change-induced alterations of multitrophic
biodiversity and the ecosystem-level responses in terrestrial ecosystems
requires holistic and integrative experimental approaches to manipulate
and study complex communities and processes above and below the ground.
We argue that mesocosm experiments fill a critical gap in this context,
especially when based on ecological theory and coupled with microcosm
experiments, field experiments, and observational studies of
macroecological patterns. We describe the design and specifications of a
novel terrestrial mesocosm facility, the iDiv Ecotron. It was developed
to allow the setup and maintenance of complex communities and the
manipulation of several abiotic factors in a near-natural way, while
simultaneously measuring multiple ecosystem functions. To demonstrate
the capabilities of the facility, we provide a case study. This study
shows that changes in aboveground multitrophic interactions caused by
decreased predator densities can have cascading effects on the
composition of belowground communities. The iDiv Ecotrons technical
features, which allow for the assembly of an endless spectrum of
ecosystem components, create the opportunity for collaboration among
researchers with an equally broad spectrum of expertise. In the last
part, we outline some of such components that will be implemented in
future ecological experiments to be realized in the iDiv Ecotron. Key
words: food webs, biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, mesocosms,
biotic interactions, lysimeters, climate chambers