Replication Data for: The importance of foundation species identity: a field experiment with lichens and their associated micro-arthropod communities (doi:10.18710/5F3QGT)

View:

Part 1: Document Description
Part 2: Study Description
Part 5: Other Study-Related Materials
Entire Codebook

(external link)

Document Description

Citation

Title:

Replication Data for: The importance of foundation species identity: a field experiment with lichens and their associated micro-arthropod communities

Identification Number:

doi:10.18710/5F3QGT

Distributor:

DataverseNO

Date of Distribution:

2022-05-23

Version:

1

Bibliographic Citation:

Roos, Ruben Erik, 2022, "Replication Data for: The importance of foundation species identity: a field experiment with lichens and their associated micro-arthropod communities", https://doi.org/10.18710/5F3QGT, DataverseNO, V1

Study Description

Citation

Title:

Replication Data for: The importance of foundation species identity: a field experiment with lichens and their associated micro-arthropod communities

Identification Number:

doi:10.18710/5F3QGT

Authoring Entity:

Roos, Ruben Erik (Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU))

Other identifications and acknowledgements:

Roos, Ruben Erik

Other identifications and acknowledgements:

Bokhorst, Stef

Producer:

Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)

Date of Production:

2019

Grant Number:

249902/F20

Distributor:

DataverseNO

Distributor:

Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)

Access Authority:

Roos, Ruben Erik

Depositor:

Roos, Ruben Erik

Date of Deposit:

2022-05-02

Date of Distribution:

2022-05-01

Holdings Information:

https://doi.org/10.18710/5F3QGT

Study Scope

Keywords:

Earth and Environmental Sciences, Microarthropods, Collembola, Oribatida, Functional diversity, Functional traits, Habitat heterogeneity, Community assembly

Abstract:

This dataset contains reproduction data for "The importance of foundation species identity: a field experiment with lichens and their associated micro-arthropod communities" by Roos et al. 2022. The dataset contains data on microarthropod abundance extracted from lichen patches with different species compositions (from monocultures to four species in mixture).

Foundation species provide habitat and modify the availability of resources to other species. In nature, multiple foundation species may occur in mixture, but little is known on how their interactions shape the community assembly of associated species. Lichens provide both structural habitat and resources to a variety of associated organisms and thereby serve as foundation species. In this study, we use mat-forming lichens and their associated micro-arthropods as a miniature ecosystem to study potential synergies between foundation species diversity and the abundance and functional diversity of higher trophic levels. We created lichen patches with monocultures and mixtures of up to four species, and extracted Collembola (identified to species level), Oribatida, Mesostigmata, Pseudoscorpiones, and Araneae with Tullgren apparatuses after 106 days of incubation within a natural lichen mat. We found that different lichen species supported different arthropod abundances. For 19 out of in total 55 lichen mixtures and arthropod groups, we found non-additive, synergistic effects on arthropod abundance, although the specific lichen mixture causing synergistic effects differed per arthropod group. In addition, synergistic effects on arthropod abundance were more common for arthropod groups at lower trophic levels. The functional diversity of lichen mixtures explained patterns in Collembola abundance, but in the opposite direction than hypothesized because synergistic responses were more frequent in functionally similar lichen mixtures. Finally, we found few effects of lichen mixture identity or diversity on the functional diversity of Collembola communities. When applied to large scale ecosystems, our results suggest that understanding interactions between coexisting foundation species and identifying those species that drive synergistic effects of foundation species on consumer biota, is likely to be of importance to biodiversity conservation and restoration efforts.

Time Period:

2017-2017

Date of Collection:

2017-05-2017-08

Country:

Norway

Geographic Coverage:

Nordre Follo, Viken

Geographic Unit(s):

municipality, county

Geographic Bounding Box:

  • West Bounding Longitude: 10.93
  • East Bounding Longitude: 10.94
  • South Bounding Latitude: 59.74
  • North Bounding Latitude: 59.75

Kind of Data:

Observation data

Kind of Data:

Experimental data

Methodology and Processing

Sources Statement

Data Access

Other Study Description Materials

Related Publications

Citation

Title:

Roos, R. E., Birkemoe, T., Bokhorst, S., Wardle, D. A., & Asplund, J. (2022). The importance of foundation species identity: A field experiment with lichens and their associated micro-arthropod communities. Basic and Applied Ecology, 62, 45–60. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.baae.2022.04.004

Identification Number:

10.1016/j.baae.2022.04.004

Bibliographic Citation:

Roos, R. E., Birkemoe, T., Bokhorst, S., Wardle, D. A., & Asplund, J. (2022). The importance of foundation species identity: A field experiment with lichens and their associated micro-arthropod communities. Basic and Applied Ecology, 62, 45–60. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.baae.2022.04.004

Other Study-Related Materials

Label:

00_README.txt

Notes:

text/plain

Other Study-Related Materials

Label:

01_Microarthropods.txt

Notes:

text/plain