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Dung removal increases under higher dung beetle functional diversity regardless of grazing intensification
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AbstractDung removal by macrofauna such as dung beetles is an important process for nutrient cycling in pasturelands. Intensification of farming practices generally reduces species and functional diversity of terrestrial invertebrates, which may negatively affect ecosystem services. Here, we investigate the effects of cattle-grazing intensification on dung removal by dung beetles in field experiments replicated in 38 pastures around the world. Within each study site, we measured dung removal in pastures managed with low- and high-intensity regimes to assess between-regime differences in dung beetle diversity and dung removal, whilst also considering climate and regional variations. The impacts of intensification were heterogeneous, either diminishing or increasing dung beetle species richness, functional diversity, and dung removal rates. The effects of beetle diversity on dung removal were more variable across sites than within sites. Dung removal increased with species richness across sites, while functional diversity consistently enhanced dung removal within sites, independently of cattle grazing intensity or climate. Our findings indicate that, despite intensified cattle stocking rates, ecosystem services related to decomposition and nutrient cycling can be maintained when a functionally diverse dung beetle community inhabits the human-modified landscape.
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Jorge Ari Noriega
Joaquín Hortal
Indradatta deCastro-Arrazola
Fernanda Alves-Martins
Jean C. G. Ortega
Luis Mauricio Bini
Nigel R. Andrew
Lucrecia Arellano
Sarah Beynon
Adrian L. V. Davis
Mario E. Favila
Kevin D. Floate
Finbarr G. Horgan
Rosa Menéndez
Tanja Milotic
Beatrice Nervo
Claudia Palestrini
Antonio Rolando
Clarke H. Scholtz
Yakup Senyüz
Thomas Wassmer
Réka Ádam
Cristina de O. Araújo
José Luis Barragan-Ramírez
Gergely Boros
Edgar Camero-Rubio
Melvin Cruz
Eva Cuesta
Miryam Pieri Damborsky
Christian M. Deschodt
Priyadarsanan Dharma Rajan
Bram D’hondt
Alfonso Díaz Rojas
Kemal Dindar
Federico Escobar
Verónica R. Espinoza
José Rafael Ferrer-Paris
Pablo Enrique Gutiérrez Rojas
Zac Hemmings
Benjamín Hernández
Sarah J. Hill
Maurice Hoffmann
Pierre Jay-Robert
Kyle Lewis
Megan Lewis
Cecilia Lozano
Diego Marín-Armijos
Patrícia Menegaz de Farias
Betselene Murcia-Ordoñez
Seena Narayanan Karimbumkara
José Luis Navarrete-Heredia
Candelaria Ortega-Echeverría
José D. Pablo-Cea
William Perrin
Marcelo Bruno Pessoa
Anu Radhakrishnan
Iraj Rahimi
Amalia Teresa Raimundo
Diana Catalina Ramos
Ramón E. Rebolledo
Angela Roggero
Ada Sánchez-Mercado
László Somay
Jutta Stadler
Pejman Tahmasebi
José Darwin Triana Céspedes
Ana M. C. Santos
Title: Dung removal increases under higher dung beetle functional diversity regardless of grazing intensification
Description:
AbstractDung removal by macrofauna such as dung beetles is an important process for nutrient cycling in pasturelands.
Intensification of farming practices generally reduces species and functional diversity of terrestrial invertebrates, which may negatively affect ecosystem services.
Here, we investigate the effects of cattle-grazing intensification on dung removal by dung beetles in field experiments replicated in 38 pastures around the world.
Within each study site, we measured dung removal in pastures managed with low- and high-intensity regimes to assess between-regime differences in dung beetle diversity and dung removal, whilst also considering climate and regional variations.
The impacts of intensification were heterogeneous, either diminishing or increasing dung beetle species richness, functional diversity, and dung removal rates.
The effects of beetle diversity on dung removal were more variable across sites than within sites.
Dung removal increased with species richness across sites, while functional diversity consistently enhanced dung removal within sites, independently of cattle grazing intensity or climate.
Our findings indicate that, despite intensified cattle stocking rates, ecosystem services related to decomposition and nutrient cycling can be maintained when a functionally diverse dung beetle community inhabits the human-modified landscape.
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