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Nutrient demands of leaf-chewing invertebrate herbivores change with temperature, which causes shifts in herbivores' diets. Temperature may act differently on herbivore species, so that factors shaping herbivore species richness may modulate temperature effects on invertebrate herbivory among plant functional groups with different nutrient composition (C:N ratio low to high: legumes, non-leguminous forbs, grasses). Global warming urges a deeper understanding of temperature effects on herbivory among plant functional groups in different habitats and landscapes. This study obtained measures on proportional leaf area loss to leaf-chewing invertebrate herbivores ('herbivory') on three plant functional groups on 80 plots of open herbaceous vegetation adjacent to different habitat types (forest, grassland, arable field, settlement) along climate and land-use gradients in Bavaria, Germany. Herbivory was analysed with regard to habitat characteristics (habitat type, plant richness at species and family level, local mean temperature), landscape characteristics (proportion of grassland, landscape diversity; 0.2–3.0-km), climate (multi-annual mean temperature, 'MAT') and interactive effects of plant functional group, temperature and habitat or landscape characteristics. Herbivory on plant functional groups changed differently in response to plant richness (family level only) and habitat type, but not to differences in landscape characteristics and temperature – only on grassland plots, multi-annual mean temperature differentially affected herbivory among plant functional groups. Thus, abiotic and biotic factors can differently affect leaf-chewing herbivory on plant functional groups. Under current conditions, plant richness and habitat type more strongly affected herbivory among legumes, forbs and grasses than temperature and landscape-scale land use.
Fricke et al herbivory data processing (.R file) This R-script contains all code needed to process data in preparation for data analysis. Fricke_et_al_herbivory_data_processing.R Fricke et al herbivory data analysis (.R file) This R-script contains the code used to analyse proportional leaf area loss to leaf-chewing herbivores including generalized linear mixed effect models and multimodel averaging. Fricke_et_al_herbivory_data_analysis.R Fricke et al herbivory data processing Raw data on proportional leaf area loss to chewing invertebrates per individual leaf were processed and standardized using the accompanying R-script on data processing to achieve data on average leaf area loss to chewing invertebrates per plant functional group and plot. The resulting processed data were used in the R-script on data analysis. Fricke_et_al_herbivory_data_raw.csv Metadata_Fricke_et_al_herbivory_data_raw.txt Fricke_et_al_herbivory_data_processed.csv Metadata_Fricke_et_al_herbivory_data_processed.txt Fricke et al data on landscape parameters This dataframe contains the landscape variables 'proportion of managed grassland area' and 'landscape diversity' at multiple spatial scales as used in the accompanying R-script on data analysis. Fricke_et_al_landscape_data.csv Metadata_ Fricke_et_al_landscape_data.txtFunding provided by: Bayerisches Staatsministerium für Wissenschaft, Forschung und KunstCrossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100005341Award Number:
Leaves at apical, middle and bottom position on a plant were collected from three individuals of three "species" per plant functional group. Morphologically different plants within plant functional groups were assumed to be different "species" but species identity was not determined. Leaves were pressed and dried until digital assessment using gimp for image processing and the BioLeaf App for calculation of proportional leaf area loss by leaf-chewing invertebrate herbivores. Proportional leaf area loss was averaged in sequence per plant individual, per 'plant species' and plant functional group. Data points were excluded when data were obtained on less than 10 leaves per plant functional group and plot and when data were not available for all three plant functional groups on a plot (processed data). For details address the manuscript.
herbivory, land use, plant guild, leaf area loss, leaf chewer, invertebrates, Air temperature, plant functional group, plant species richness, ecosystem functions, space-for-time design
herbivory, land use, plant guild, leaf area loss, leaf chewer, invertebrates, Air temperature, plant functional group, plant species richness, ecosystem functions, space-for-time design
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