Guild Structure in the British Arboreal Arthropods: Is it Stable and Predictable?
- 1 October 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Journal of Animal Ecology
- Vol. 58 (3) , 1003-1020
- https://doi.org/10.2307/5138
Abstract
The British arboreal arthropods were cross-classified into four guild and fifteen taxonomic categories, examined for patterns of variation among twenty-eight tree species and variously analyzed in relation to relevant host tree attributes; both varied widely. The porportion of species in the ''chewers'' guild increased on more abundant, taxonomically related hosts with 46% of guild variation explained by these attributes. Other tested attributes had no effect on this guild, and sap-feeders, leaf-miners and gallformers were either marginally or not at all influenced by any host attribute. Neither evergreenness nor palatability accounted for any residual guild variation. Guilds increased or decreased in richness independently of one another with one exception: sap-feeders and chewers guilds increased in parallel. There was little tendency for tree species having similar guild structures to have similar taxonomic structures, suggesting that the patterns of guild and taxonomic variation are too complex to be ranked on a single scale. However, particularly large or small guilds on single tree species tended to contain at least one particularly large or small taxon as well, indicating that outsized guilds resulted from the presence of outsized taxa rather than a uniform swelling or shrinkage of all taxa in a guild. Most of this pattern occurred in the leaf-miners and gall-formers which appeared to be less saturated than the chewers and sap-feeders. Other than this, ''outsized'' taxa appeared idiosyncratically and unpredictably across all guilds, host trees and taxonomic groups. The large amount of unexplained guild variation in this system suggests that the stable predictable guild structures proposed for other faunas are not mirrored here. Instead, the linkage between outsized taxa and guilds suggests a strong historical component contributing to the functional structure in this fauna.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Enemy free space and the structure of ecological communitiesBiological Journal of the Linnean Society, 1984
- The Number of Species of Insects Associated with British Trees: A Re-AnalysisJournal of Animal Ecology, 1984
- Patterns in the distribution of leaf‐miners on British treesEcological Entomology, 1984
- The Richness, Abundance and Biomass of the Arthropod Communities on TreesJournal of Animal Ecology, 1982
- Insect herbivore guilds and species—area relationships: leafminers on British treesEcological Entomology, 1982
- THE DIFFERENTIAL EFFECTS OF INGESTED TANNIC ACID ON DIFFERENT SPECIES OF ACRIDOIDEAEntomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 1980
- Species Richness of Parasites on Hosts: Agromyzid Flies on the British UmbelliferaeJournal of Animal Ecology, 1979
- Coevolution in Insect Herbivores and ConifersScience, 1978
- Trophic Structure Determination and Equilibrium in an Arthropod CommunityEcology, 1976
- Organization of a Plant‐Arthropod Association in Simple and Diverse Habitats: The Fauna of Collards (Brassica Oleracea)Ecological Monographs, 1973