2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.agee.2015.07.008
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Interactive effects of large herbivores and plant diversity on insect abundance in a meadow steppe in China

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Cited by 37 publications
(36 citation statements)
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References 51 publications
(65 reference statements)
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“…Grasslands are managed ecosystems, and one of the key management tools is grazing by large herbivores that are recognised as exerting one of the greatest effects on grassland ecosystems (Bagchi & Ritchie, 2010;Gill, 2015). A growing number of studies have generated great interest in understanding the ecological effects of grazing on grasshoppers owing to food and habitat (Jonas & Joern, 2007;O'Neill et al, 2010;Zhu et al, 2015). Meanwhile, with further climate change still expected, precipitation patterns may be more spatially heterogeneous and less predictable than temperature and CO 2 concentration (Beier et al, 2012), and grassland ecosystems are expected to be especially vulnerable to altered precipitation (McCluney et al, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Grasslands are managed ecosystems, and one of the key management tools is grazing by large herbivores that are recognised as exerting one of the greatest effects on grassland ecosystems (Bagchi & Ritchie, 2010;Gill, 2015). A growing number of studies have generated great interest in understanding the ecological effects of grazing on grasshoppers owing to food and habitat (Jonas & Joern, 2007;O'Neill et al, 2010;Zhu et al, 2015). Meanwhile, with further climate change still expected, precipitation patterns may be more spatially heterogeneous and less predictable than temperature and CO 2 concentration (Beier et al, 2012), and grassland ecosystems are expected to be especially vulnerable to altered precipitation (McCluney et al, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Insects were sampled four times in each plot during mid‐July and late‐September in 2014. To estimate insect species richness and abundance, we collected insects with a sweep net using a light muslin net (40 cm in diameter) along two 2‐m wide and 30‐m long parallel transects spaced 12 m apart (Schaffers et al ., ; Zhu et al ., , ). Transects were at least 2 m from the plot boundary to minimise edge effects.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Combining current knowledge, the effects of grazing by large herbivores and the effects of increased rainfall on plant species richness and biomass are inextricably linked to plant community characteristics (Bakker et al ., ; Liu et al ., ), with positive, neutral, or negative effects (Olff & Ritchie, ; Suttle et al ., ; Burns et al ., ; Alberti et al ., ). Given these possibilities, the effects of grazing and altered precipitation on plants are often direct, and such effects could cascade to insects (Zhu et al ., , ; Lenhart et al ., ; Van Klink et al ., ), because insects have been shown to have close relationships with plant communities (Knop et al ., ; Haddad et al ., ). However, almost nothing is known about how grazing and altered precipitation patterns interact to affect insect diversity by directly and indirectly changing their resources in grasslands.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, the distribution of grasshopper heterogeneity was directly influenced by herbivore foraging decisions (Wiggins, et al 2006;Zhu, et al 2015), and radically determined by the topography of Qilan mountains (Li, et al 2011;Li, et al 2013;Zhao, et al 2012), micro-climate and soil condition. The result much the same as others (Huang, et al 2017b;Yan and Chen 1998;Zhao, et al 2012;Zhao, et al 2009), was that horizontal distribution of two communities presented a flaky and plaque distribution pattern, with obvious heterosexual structure.…”
Section: Conclusion and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%