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Why are parts of the world green? Multiple factors control productivity and the distribution of biomass Gary A. Polis. OIKOS 86: 3-15. Copenhagen 1999 Topics on Ecosystem Ecology. Petra Bachmann and Luisa Ricaurte
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Why are parts of the world green? Multiple factors control productivity and the distribution of biomass Gary A. Polis. OIKOS 86: 3-15. Copenhagen 1999.

Jan 21, 2016

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Page 1: Why are parts of the world green? Multiple factors control productivity and the distribution of biomass Gary A. Polis. OIKOS 86: 3-15. Copenhagen 1999.

Why are parts of the world green?Multiple factors control productivity and the

distribution of biomass

Gary A. Polis. OIKOS 86: 3-15. Copenhagen 1999

Topics on Ecosystem Ecology. Petra Bachmann and Luisa Ricaurte

Page 2: Why are parts of the world green? Multiple factors control productivity and the distribution of biomass Gary A. Polis. OIKOS 86: 3-15. Copenhagen 1999.

What does Polis (1999) argue?“Cascading predation appears

to explain only a very small fraction of the variance in the temporal and spatial

distribution of plant biomass in land communities”

Example of a food chain in a Swedish lake. Wikipedia, 2009.

Page 3: Why are parts of the world green? Multiple factors control productivity and the distribution of biomass Gary A. Polis. OIKOS 86: 3-15. Copenhagen 1999.

THERE ARE MORE FACTORS TO

EXPLAIN THE DISTIBUTION OF

BIOMASS

(determine the „greenness“)

6 hypothesis

Page 4: Why are parts of the world green? Multiple factors control productivity and the distribution of biomass Gary A. Polis. OIKOS 86: 3-15. Copenhagen 1999.

1. Productivity and distribution of biomassis regulated by TOP DOWN forces

GREEN WORLD HYPOTESIS(GWH)

Hairston, Frederick Smith and Lawrence Slobodkin, 1960

EXPLOITATION ECOSYSTEM HYPOTESIS

(EEH)

Fretwell, 1977, 1987; Oksanen et al. 1981

Page 5: Why are parts of the world green? Multiple factors control productivity and the distribution of biomass Gary A. Polis. OIKOS 86: 3-15. Copenhagen 1999.

GREEN WORLD HYPOTESIS (GWH)

EXPLOITATION ECOSYSTEM HYPOTESIS (EEH)

Predator Herbivore Biomass

Predator Herbivore BiomassPredator

Page 6: Why are parts of the world green? Multiple factors control productivity and the distribution of biomass Gary A. Polis. OIKOS 86: 3-15. Copenhagen 1999.

2. Nutrients, limit herbivore number, and thus their effect

Nutrients limitation

Natural or Influenced by humans

Page 7: Why are parts of the world green? Multiple factors control productivity and the distribution of biomass Gary A. Polis. OIKOS 86: 3-15. Copenhagen 1999.

3. Abiotic factors: climate and disturbance, limit herbivore numbers to observed levels

Sunlight

Climate

Natural catastrophes

Cyclical events

Page 8: Why are parts of the world green? Multiple factors control productivity and the distribution of biomass Gary A. Polis. OIKOS 86: 3-15. Copenhagen 1999.

More factors……

• 4. Plants are not passive agents, waiting to be decimated by herbivores – resource defenses

• 5. Spatial and temporal heterogeneity – scales, season and periods

• 6. Herbivors limit their own numbers – self regulation

Page 9: Why are parts of the world green? Multiple factors control productivity and the distribution of biomass Gary A. Polis. OIKOS 86: 3-15. Copenhagen 1999.

Estimates of ANPP

Only a fifth part of ANPP on land is eaten each year

Plant SB only represents an estimated 3-7 % of ANPP

Page 10: Why are parts of the world green? Multiple factors control productivity and the distribution of biomass Gary A. Polis. OIKOS 86: 3-15. Copenhagen 1999.

When does trophic cascades affect biomass productivity?

o Appropriate environmental conditionso Characteristics of key consumers and

resourceso Multichannel omnivory and subsidies

Page 11: Why are parts of the world green? Multiple factors control productivity and the distribution of biomass Gary A. Polis. OIKOS 86: 3-15. Copenhagen 1999.

When does trophic cascades affect biomass productivity?

Community cascades but not species cascades

Pathogens and parasites cascades

-> only community cascades explain sometimes GWH and EEH

Page 12: Why are parts of the world green? Multiple factors control productivity and the distribution of biomass Gary A. Polis. OIKOS 86: 3-15. Copenhagen 1999.

More knowledge is needed in:

• How population dynamics affect ecosystem process and vice versa

• How do spatially variable productivity and flux of trophic entities affect populations and communities?

• How does past productivity, stored and used, affect current interactions?

• How age and stage structured processes affect food webs and communities?

• Is energy and nutrient internally recycled or linked to population dynamics of larger species?

Page 13: Why are parts of the world green? Multiple factors control productivity and the distribution of biomass Gary A. Polis. OIKOS 86: 3-15. Copenhagen 1999.

Conclusions

• GWH and EEH are only in a very few spatial and temporal scale the reason for biomass productivity, universally abiotic factors, nutrient, self-regulatory, competition and so one control much more the green world than predator-herbivory-cascades

• GWH and EEH occur more in water than land cascades