Asynchrony and functional diversity couple herbivore community dynamics to host plant diversity
Chronological data
Date of first publication2026-01-15
Date of publication in PubData 2026-01-26
Language of the resource
English
Editor
Case provider
Other contributors
Abstract
Biodiversity loss can destabilize ecosystem functioning. How biodiversity–stability relationships are interlinked across trophic levels remains poorly investigated, however, limiting our ability to predict ecosystem-level consequences of declining biodiversity. Here, we analyze the drivers of multi-year herbivore community stability—as a key connector between primary producers and higher trophic levels—and its coupling with host tree diversity and growth stability along a subtropical tree diversity gradient. Phylogenetic diversity, abundance asynchrony and population stability of herbivores emerge as key intra-community regulators of herbivore temporal stability. These regulators, in turn, are strongly affected by changes in tree species richness through tree functional diversity, tree growth asynchrony, and tree growth population stability. Importantly, accounting for herbivore dietary specialization unveils clear stabilizing effects of tree species richness on the community stability of specialists but not of generalists. For the overall herbivore community, higher tree richness results in less stable abundance dynamics. Our findings suggest that biodiversity loss will propagate bottom-up to affect the stability of communities at higher trophic levels, and particularly destabilize communities of more vulnerable specialists. Global change and plantation management may thus also compromise biodiversity conservation by reducing abundance and species richness stability of higher trophic levels.
Keywords
Biodiversity; Community Ecology
Faculty / department
Notes
The tree and herbivore data generated in this study have been
deposited in the figshare repository (DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.
30531410), in the Science Data Bank (DOI: 10.57760/
sciencedb.31116), in the BEF-China repository at https://data.botanik.
uni-halle.de/bef-china/datasets/695. The COI sequences generated in
this study have been deposited in The Genome Sequence Archive
(GSA) under project PRJCA052105 (accession ID: CRA034950).
