Publications by authors named "D P Giling"

Article Synopsis
  • Lakes around the world are influenced by multiple factors, particularly climate change, resulting in nutrient and humic substance overload during extreme weather, complicating ecological predictions.
  • Researchers conducted experiments to study the effects of storm-induced lake browning and nutrient enrichment on phytoplankton, finding that browning inhibits phytoplankton growth and shifts community composition.
  • Long-term monitoring data support these experimental findings, revealing that clear-water lakes have lower phosphorus thresholds for cyanobacterial blooms compared to humic lakes, which offers practical management insights for nutrient-rich lakes affected by climate change.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The commercial use and spread of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) in freshwaters have greatly increased over the last decade. Both AgNPs and ionic silver (Ag) released from nanoparticles are toxic to organisms and compromise ecosystem processes such as leaf litter decomposition. Yet little is known about how AgNPs affect multitrophic systems of interacting species.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Arthropod herbivores cause substantial economic costs that drive an increasing need to develop environmentally sustainable approaches to herbivore control. Increasing plant diversity is expected to limit herbivory by altering plant-herbivore and predator-herbivore interactions, but the simultaneous influence of these interactions on herbivore impacts remains unexplored. We compiled 487 arthropod food webs in two long-running grassland biodiversity experiments in Europe and North America to investigate whether and how increasing plant diversity can reduce the impacts of herbivores on plants.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Concern about the functional consequences of unprecedented loss in biodiversity has prompted biodiversity-ecosystem functioning (BEF) research to become one of the most active fields of ecological research in the past 25 years. Hundreds of experiments have manipulated biodiversity as an independent variable and found compelling support that the functioning of ecosystems increases with the diversity of their ecological communities. This research has also identified some of the mechanisms underlying BEF relationships, some context-dependencies of the strength of relationships, as well as implications for various ecosystem services that mankind depends upon.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Changes in the diversity of plant communities may undermine the economically and environmentally important consumer species they support. The structure of trophic interactions determines the sensitivity of food webs to perturbations, but rigorous assessments of plant diversity effects on network topology are lacking. Here, we use highly resolved networks from a grassland biodiversity experiment to test how plant diversity affects the prevalence of different food web motifs, the smaller recurrent sub-networks that form the building blocks of complex networks.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF