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Temperature preferences drive additive biotic homogenization of Orthoptera assemblages

Simon Thorn, Sebastian König, Othmar Fischer-Leipold, Julia Gombert, Josline Griese, Jürgen Thein

2022Biology Letters18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The degradation of natural habitats is causing ongoing homogenization of biological communities and declines in terrestrial insect biodiversity, particularly in agricultural landscapes. Orthoptera are focal species of nature conservation and experienced significant diversity losses over the past decades. However, the causes underlying these changes are not yet fully understood. We analysed changes in Orthoptera assemblages surveyed in 1988, 2004 and 2019 on 198 plots distributed across four major grassland types in Central Europe. We demonstrated compositional differences in Orthoptera assemblages found in wet, dry and mesic grasslands, as well as ruderal habitats decreased, indicating biotic homogenization. However, mean α-diversity of Orthoptera assemblages increased over the study period. We detected increasing numbers of species with preferences for higher temperatures in mesic and wet grasslands. By analysing the temperature, moisture and vegetation preferences of Orthoptera, we found that additive homogenization was driven by a loss of species adapted to extremely dry and nitrogen-poor habitats and a parallel spread of species preferring warmer macroclimates.

Topics & Concepts

OrthopteraBiologyHabitatBiodiversityEcologyHomogenization (climate)Ruderal speciesGrasslandAcridoideaSpecies diversitySpecies richnessEcosystemAcrididaeSpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesPlant and animal studies
Temperature preferences drive additive biotic homogenization of Orthoptera assemblages | Litcius