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Understanding biodiversity effects on prey in multi-enemy systems
Authors:Casula Paolo  Wilby Andrew  Thomas Matthew B
Institution:Centre for Population Biology, Division of Biology, Imperial College London, Silwood Park Campus, Ascot, Berkshire SL5 7PY, UK;
Centre for Agri-Environmental Research, Department of Agriculture, University of Reading, Reading, Berks RG6 6AR, UK;
CSIRO Entomology, GPO Box 1700, Canberra ACT 2601, Australia
Abstract:Biodiversity–ecosystem functioning theory would predict that increasing natural enemy richness should enhance prey consumption rate due to functional complementarity of enemy species. However, several studies show that ecological interactions among natural enemies may result in complex effects of enemy diversity on prey consumption. Therefore, the challenge in understanding natural enemy diversity effects is to predict consumption rates of multiple enemies taking into account effects arising from patterns of prey use together with species interactions. Here, we show how complementary and redundant prey use patterns result in additive and saturating effects, respectively, and how ecological interactions such as phenotypic niche shifts, synergy and intraguild predation enlarge the range of outcomes to include null, synergistic and antagonistic effects. This study provides a simple theoretical framework that can be applied to experimental studies to infer the biological mechanisms underlying natural enemy diversity effects on prey.
Keywords:Additive effects  biological control  complementarity  ecosystem functioning  intraguild predation  phenotypic niche shifts  predator diversity  redundancy  resource partitioning  synergy
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