How different would a world without herbivory be?: A search for generality in ecology

David S. Bigger, Michelle A. Marvier
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引用次数: 86

Abstract

The conventional wisdom of most ecologists is that herbivores are generally incapable of strongly affecting plant populations in natural communities. Thus, ecologists have largely focused on the role of competition for limited resources but have ignored herbivory as a primary factor determining plant success. Here, we present a quantitative review of herbivore manipulations and find that herbivores do exert important effects on plant biomass—equally as important as those of plant competition. This result should alter the way plant communities are investigated. Furthermore, we find that the effects of invertebrate herbivores are significantly stronger than those of vertebrates; this is in contrast to widely held views. Quantitative syntheses of accumulated studies, such as the one presented here, can provide surprising answers to a broad scope of biological questions. This is especially important in fields lacking a strong theoretical basis, in which generalities are born from empiricism rather than deductive theorizing.

一个没有食草动物的世界会有什么不同?对生态学共性的探索
大多数生态学家的传统观点是,食草动物通常不能对自然群落中的植物种群产生强烈影响。因此,生态学家也主要集中在对有限资源的竞争的作用而忽略了食草性主要因素确定植物的成功。在这里,我们提出一个定量评估的食草动物操作和发现食草动物对植物biomass-equally起到重要作用一样重要的植物竞争。这一结果将改变调查植物群落的方式。此外,我们发现无脊椎食草动物的影响明显强于脊椎动物;这与人们普遍持有的观点相反。对积累的研究进行定量综合,就像这里展示的那样,可以为广泛的生物学问题提供令人惊讶的答案。这在缺乏强有力的理论基础的领域尤其重要,在这些领域中,概括性来自经验主义,而不是演绎的理论化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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