Trophic downgrading decreases species asynchrony and community stability
regardless of climate warming
Abstract
Theory and some evidence suggest that biodiversity promotes stability.
However, evidence of how trophic interactions and environmental changes
modulate this relationship in multitrophic communities is lacking. Given
the current scenario of biodiversity loss and climate changes, where top
predators are disproportionately more affected, filling these knowledge
gaps is crucial. We simulated climate warming and top predator loss in
natural microcosms to investigate their direct and indirect effects on
temporal stability of microbial communites. We also investigated the
role of underlying stabilizing mechanisms on community stability.
Community stability was insensitive to warming, but indirectly decreased
due to top predator loss via increased mesopredator abundance and
consequent reduction of species asynchrony and stability. The magnitude
of destabilizing effects differed among trophic levels, being
disproportionally higher at lower trophic levels (e.g. producers). Our
study unravels major patterns and causal mechanisms by which trophic
downgrading destabilizes large food webs, regardless of climate warming
scenarios.