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- Title
Effects of organism size and community composition on ecosystem functioning.
- Authors
Long, Zachary T.; Morin, Peter J.; Agren, Goran
- Abstract
We tested (1) if the size of dominant species influenced ecosystem functioning in food webs consisting of bacteria, algae, and protozoa; (2) whether those effects changed in importance through time; and (3) how those effects compared with differences in diversity among experimental food webs. We constructed food webs using two size fractions of organisms that differed in individual mass by approximately two orders of magnitude. We measured total biomass and respiration (total CO2 production) as two aspects of ecosystem functioning. We also compared these size-dependent patterns in functioning across two levels of species richness. Initially, organism size strongly influenced total community biomass. With time, however, biomass and respiration eventually converged in communities dominated by large or small species. We conclude that after sufficient time for community development any differences in ecosystem functioning resulted from differences in community composition, including species richness, but not the size of the dominant organisms.
- Subjects
BIOTIC communities; FOOD chains; BACTERIA; ALGAE; PROTOZOA
- Publication
Ecology Letters, 2005, Vol 8, Issue 12, p1271
- ISSN
1461-023X
- Publication type
Letter
- DOI
10.1111/j.1461-0248.2005.00830.x