Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where David Ott is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by David Ott.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2012

Climate change effects on macrofaunal litter decomposition: the interplay of temperature, body masses and stoichiometry

David Ott; Björn C. Rall; Ulrich Brose

Macrofauna invertebrates of forest floors provide important functions in the decomposition process of soil organic matter, which is affected by the nutrient stoichiometry of the leaf litter. Climate change effects on forest ecosystems include warming and decreasing litter quality (e.g. higher C : nutrient ratios) induced by higher atmospheric CO2 concentrations. While litter-bag experiments unravelled separate effects, a mechanistic understanding of how interactions between temperature and litter stoichiometry are driving decomposition rates is lacking. In a laboratory experiment, we filled this void by quantifying decomposer consumption rates analogous to predator–prey functional responses that include the mechanistic parameters handling time and attack rate. Systematically, we varied the body masses of isopods, the environmental temperature and the resource between poor (hornbeam) and good quality (ash). We found that attack rates increased and handling times decreased (i) with body masses and (ii) temperature. Interestingly, these relationships interacted with litter quality: small isopods possibly avoided the poorer resource, whereas large isopods exhibited increased, compensatory feeding of the poorer resource, which may be explained by their higher metabolic demands. The combination of metabolic theory and ecological stoichiometry provided critically important mechanistic insights into how warming and varying litter quality may modify macrofaunal decomposition rates.


Ecology | 2014

Lack of energetic equivalence in forest soil invertebrates

Roswitha B. Ehnes; Melanie M. Pollierer; Georgia Erdmann; Bernhard Klarner; Bernhard Eitzinger; Christoph Digel; David Ott; Mark Maraun; Stefan Scheu; Ulrich Brose

Ecological communities consist of small abundant and large non-abundant species. The energetic equivalence rule is an often-observed pattern that could be explained by equal energy usage among abundant small organisms and non-abundant large organisms. To generate this pattern, metabolism (as an indicator of individual energy use) and abundance have to scale inversely with body mass, and cancel each other out. In contrast, the pattern referred to as biomass equivalence states that the biomass of all species in an area should be constant across the body-mass range. In this study, we investigated forest soil communities with respect to metabolism, abundance, population energy use, and biomass. We focused on four land-use types in three different landscape blocks (Biodiversity Exploratories). The soil samples contained 870 species across 12 phylogenetic groups. Our results indicated positive sublinear metabolic scaling and negative sublinear abundance scaling with species body mass. The relationships varied mainly due to differences among phylogenetic groups or feeding types, and only marginally due to land-use type. However, these scaling relationships were not exactly inverse to each other, resulting in increasing population energy use and biomass with increasing body mass for most combinations of phylogenetic group or feeding type with land-use type. Thus, our results are mostly inconsistent with the classic perception of energetic equivalence, and reject the biomass equivalence hypothesis while documenting a specific and nonrandom pattern of how abundance, energy use, and biomass are distributed across size classes. However, these patterns are consistent with two alternative predictions: the resource-thinning hypothesis, which states that abundance decreases with trophic level, and the allometric degree hypothesis, which states that population energy use should increase with population average body mass, due to correlations with the number of links of consumers and resources. Overall, our results suggest that a synthesis of food web structures with metabolic theory may be most promising for predicting natural patterns of abundance, biomass, and energy use.


Ecology Letters | 2014

Unifying elemental stoichiometry and metabolic theory in predicting species abundances

David Ott; Christoph Digel; Björn C. Rall; Mark Maraun; Stefan Scheu; Ulrich Brose

While metabolic theory predicts variance in population density within communities depending on population average body masses, the ecological stoichiometry concept relates density variation across communities to varying resource stoichiometry. Using a data set including biomass densities of 4959 populations of soil invertebrates across 48 forest sites we combined these two frameworks. We analyzed how the scaling of biomass densities with population-averaged body masses systematically interacts with stoichiometric variables. Simplified analyses employing either only body masses or only resource stoichiometry are highly context sensitive and yield variable and often misleading results. Our findings provide strong evidence that analyses of ecological state variables should integrate allometric and stoichiometric variables to explain deviations from predicted allometric scaling and avoid erroneous conclusions. In consequence, our study provides an important step towards unifying two prominent ecological theories, metabolic theory and ecological stoichiometry.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2016

Species richness and biomass explain spatial turnover in ecosystem functioning across tropical and temperate ecosystems

Andrew D. Barnes; Patrick Weigelt; Malte Jochum; David Ott; Dorothee Hodapp; Noor Farikhah Haneda; Ulrich Brose

Predicting ecosystem functioning at large spatial scales rests on our ability to scale up from local plots to landscapes, but this is highly contingent on our understanding of how functioning varies through space. Such an understanding has been hampered by a strong experimental focus of biodiversity–ecosystem functioning research restricted to small spatial scales. To address this limitation, we investigate the drivers of spatial variation in multitrophic energy flux—a measure of ecosystem functioning in complex communities—at the landscape scale. We use a structural equation modelling framework based on distance matrices to test how spatial and environmental distances drive variation in community energy flux via four mechanisms: species composition, species richness, niche complementarity and biomass. We found that in both a tropical and a temperate study region, geographical and environmental distance indirectly influence species richness and biomass, with clear evidence that these are the dominant mechanisms explaining variability in community energy flux over spatial and environmental gradients. Our results reveal that species composition and trait variability may become redundant in predicting ecosystem functioning at the landscape scale. Instead, we demonstrate that species richness and total biomass may best predict rates of ecosystem functioning at larger spatial scales.


The American Naturalist | 2017

Decreasing Stoichiometric Resource Quality Drives Compensatory Feeding across Trophic Levels in Tropical Litter Invertebrate Communities

Malte Jochum; Andrew D. Barnes; David Ott; Birgit Lang; Bernhard Klarner; Achmad Farajallah; Stefan Scheu; Ulrich Brose

Living organisms are constrained by both resource quantity and quality. Ecological stoichiometry offers important insights into how the elemental composition of resources affects their consumers. If resource quality decreases, consumers can respond by shifting their body stoichiometry, avoiding low-quality resources, or up-regulating feeding rates to maintain the supply of required elements while excreting excess carbon (i.e., compensatory feeding). We analyzed multitrophic consumer body stoichiometry, biomass, and feeding rates along a resource-quality gradient in the litter of tropical forest and rubber and oil-palm plantations. Specifically, we calculated macroinvertebrate feeding rates based on consumer metabolic demand and assimilation efficiency. Using linear mixed effects models, we assessed resource-quality effects on macroinvertebrate detritivore and predator communities. We did not detect shifts in consumer body stoichiometry or decreases in consumer biomass in response to declining resource quality, as indicated by increasing carbon-to-nitrogen ratios. However, across trophic levels, we found a strong indication of decreasing resource quality leading to increased consumer feeding rates through altered assimilation efficiency and community body size structure. Our study reveals the influence of resource quality on multitrophic consumer feeding rates and suggests compensatory feeding to be more common across consumer trophic levels than was formerly known.


Oikos | 2011

Taxonomic versus allometric constraints on non‐linear interaction strengths

Björn C. Rall; Gregor Kalinkat; David Ott; Olivera Vucic-Pestic; Ulrich Brose


Oikos | 2014

Litter elemental stoichiometry and biomass densities of forest soil invertebrates

David Ott; Christoph Digel; Bernhard Klarner; Mark Maraun; Melanie M. Pollierer; Björn C. Rall; Stefan Scheu; Gesine Seelig; Ulrich Brose


Journal of Animal Ecology | 2017

Resource stoichiometry and availability modulate species richness and biomass of tropical litter macro‐invertebrates

Malte Jochum; Andrew D. Barnes; Patrick Weigelt; David Ott; Katja Rembold; Achmad Farajallah; Ulrich Brose


Archive | 2017

Leaf-litter tissue carbon and nitrogen content

Malte Jochum; Andrew David Barnes; David Ott; Birgit Lang; Bernhard Klarner; Achmad Farajallah; Stefan Scheu; Ulrich Brose


Archive | 2017

Macro-invertebrate community data per site and feeding type

Malte Jochum; Andrew David Barnes; David Ott; Birgit Lang; Bernhard Klarner; Achmad Farajallah; Stefan Scheu; Ulrich Brose

Collaboration


Dive into the David Ott's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ulrich Brose

University of Göttingen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Stefan Scheu

University of Göttingen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Malte Jochum

University of Göttingen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Achmad Farajallah

Bogor Agricultural University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Birgit Lang

University of Göttingen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Björn C. Rall

University of Göttingen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge