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Dive into the research topics where Dorothee Hodapp is active.

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Featured researches published by Dorothee Hodapp.


Journal of Applied Ecology | 2018

Biodiversity change is uncoupled from species richness trends: consequences for conservation and monitoring

Helmut Hillebrand; Bernd Blasius; Elizabeth T. Borer; Jonathan M. Chase; John A. Downing; Britas Klemens Eriksson; Christopher T. Filstrup; W. Stanley Harpole; Dorothee Hodapp; Stefano Larsen; Aleksandra M. Lewandowska; Eric W. Seabloom; Dedmer B. Van de Waal; Alexey B. Ryabov

Global concern about human impact on biological diversity has triggered an intense research agenda on drivers and consequences of biodiversity change in parallel with international policy seeking to conserve biodiversity and associated ecosystem functions. Quantifying the trends in biodiversity is far from trivial, however, as recently documented by meta-analyses, which report little if any net change in local species richness through time. Here, we summarise several limitations of species richness as a metric of biodiversity change and show that the expectation of directional species richness trends under changing conditions is invalid. Instead, we illustrate how a set of species turnover indices provide more information content regarding temporal trends in biodiversity, as they reflect how dominance and identity shift in communities over time. We apply these metrics to three monitoring datasets representing different ecosystem types. In all datasets, nearly complete species turnover occurred, but this was disconnected from any species richness trends. Instead, turnover was strongly influenced by changes in species presence (identities) and dominance (abundances). We further show that these metrics can detect phases of strong compositional shifts in monitoring data and thus identify a different aspect of biodiversity change decoupled from species richness. Synthesis and applications: Temporal trends in species richness are insufficient to capture key changes in biodiversity in changing environments. In fact, reductions in environmental quality can lead to transient increases in species richness if immigration or extinction has different temporal dynamics. Thus, biodiversity monitoring programmes need to go beyond analyses of trends in richness in favour of more meaningful assessments of biodiversity change.


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.


Ecology | 2016

Environmental and trait variability constrain community structure and the biodiversity‐productivity relationship

Dorothee Hodapp; Helmut Hillebrand; Bernd Blasius; Alexey B. Ryabov

There is still considerable debate about which mechanisms drive the relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem function (BEF). Although most scientists agree on the existence of two underlying mechanisms, complementarity and selection, experimental studies keep producing contrasting results on the relative contributions of the two effects. We present a spatially explicit resource competition model and investigate how the strength of these effects is influenced by trait and environmental variability, resource distribution, and species pool size. Our results demonstrate that the increase of biomass production with increasing species numbers depends on the concurrence of environmental and trait variability: BEF relationships are stronger if functionally different species coexist in a landscape with heterogeneous resource supply. These large biodiversity effects arise from complementarity effects, whereas selection effects are maximized when broad trait ranges coincide with narrow ranges of resource supply ratios. Our results will therefore help to resolve the debate on complementarity and selection mechanisms.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2014

Can monitoring data contribute to the biodiversity-ecosystem function debate? Evaluating data from a highly dynamic ecosystem

Dorothee Hodapp; Dietmar Kraft; Helmut Hillebrand

One of the most controversially discussed topics in current biodiversity-ecosystem function research is the transfer of results from experimental and theoretical studies to natural ecosystems. At the same time, monitoring data on biodiversity are requested as key indicators for the state of an ecosystem in most environmental evaluation frameworks. We analyse two monitoring data sets comprising information on abundance and biomass of macrozoobenthos communities in the German Wadden Sea in order to evaluate how much information monitoring data on biodiversity provide concerning ecosystem functioning and what implications this information (or the lack thereof) has for future monitoring programmes. Our results show a positive correlation between number of species of macrozoobenthos and its standing stock. Despite differences in overall biomass and individual size in different functional groups, this correlation remained consistent for different feeding guilds and therefore is likely to be independent of certain species traits. Moreover, functional turnover analyses indicate that increasing species richness is needed to maintain biomass levels over increasing periods of time. Whereas our data thus corroborate predictions from theory, we could not determine any causal relationships, because monitoring data commonly include only vague proxies for very few functional parameters, in our case standing biomass as a proxy for production. As to the use of diversity as an indicator for ecosystem functioning, we advise that management decisions are to be based on verified causal relationships and therefore strongly suggest the general incorporation of unambiguous proxies for functional parameters in the measuring campaigns of monitoring programmes.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2017

High wind speeds prevent formation of a distinct bacterioneuston community in the sea-surface microlayer

Janina Rahlff; Christian Stolle; Helge-Ansgar Giebel; Thorsten Brinkhoff; Mariana Ribas-Ribas; Dorothee Hodapp; Oliver Wurl

Abstract The sea-surface microlayer (SML) at the boundary between atmosphere and hydrosphere represents a demanding habitat for bacteria. Wind speed is a crucial but poorly studied factor for its physical integrity. Increasing atmospheric burden of CO2, as suggested for future climate scenarios, may particularly act on this habitat at the air–sea interface. We investigated the effect of increasing wind speeds and different pCO2 levels on SML microbial communities in a wind-wave tunnel, which offered the advantage of low spatial and temporal variability. We found that enrichment of bacteria in the SML occurred solely at a U10 wind speed of ≤5.6 m s−1 in the tunnel and ≤4.1 m s−1 in the Baltic Sea. High pCO2 levels further intensified the bacterial enrichment in the SML during low wind speed. In addition, low wind speed and pCO2 induced the formation of a distinctive bacterial community as revealed by 16S rRNA gene fingerprints and influenced the presence or absence of individual taxonomic units within the SML. We conclude that physical stability of the SML below a system-specific wind speed threshold induces specific bacterial communities in the SML entailing strong implications for ecosystem functioning by wind-driven impacts on habitat properties, gas exchange and matter cycling processes.


Ecology Letters | 2018

Spatial heterogeneity in species composition constrains plant community responses to herbivory and fertilisation

Dorothee Hodapp; Elizabeth T. Borer; W. Stanley Harpole; Eric M. Lind; Eric W. Seabloom; Peter B. Adler; Juan Alberti; Carlos Alberto Arnillas; Jonathan D. Bakker; Lori A. Biederman; Marc W. Cadotte; Elsa E. Cleland; Scott L. Collins; Philip A. Fay; Jennifer Firn; Nicole Hagenah; Yann Hautier; Oscar Iribarne; Johannes M. H. Knops; Rebecca L. McCulley; Andrew S. MacDougall; Joslin L. Moore; John W. Morgan; Brent Mortensen; Kimberly J. La Pierre; Anita C. Risch; Martin Schütz; Pablo Luis Peri; Carly J. Stevens; Justin P. Wright

Environmental change can result in substantial shifts in community composition. The associated immigration and extinction events are likely constrained by the spatial distribution of species. Still, studies on environmental change typically quantify biotic responses at single spatial (time series within a single plot) or temporal (spatial beta diversity at single time points) scales, ignoring their potential interdependence. Here, we use data from a global network of grassland experiments to determine how turnover responses to two major forms of environmental change - fertilisation and herbivore loss - are affected by species pool size and spatial compositional heterogeneity. Fertilisation led to higher rates of local extinction, whereas turnover in herbivore exclusion plots was driven by species replacement. Overall, sites with more spatially heterogeneous composition showed significantly higher rates of annual turnover, independent of species pool size and treatment. Taking into account spatial biodiversity aspects will therefore improve our understanding of consequences of global and anthropogenic change on community dynamics.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2016

Unifying ecological stoichiometry and metabolic theory to predict production and trophic transfer in a marine planktonic food web.

Stefanie Moorthi; Jennifer A. Schmitt; Alexey B. Ryabov; Ioannis Tsakalakis; Bernd Blasius; Lara Prelle; Marc Tiedemann; Dorothee Hodapp


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2015

Structural equation modeling approach to the diversity-productivity relationship of Wadden Sea phytoplankton

Dorothee Hodapp; Sandra Meier; Friso Muijsers; Thomas H. Badewien; Helmut Hillebrand


Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science | 2017

Experimental salt marsh islands: A model system for novel metacommunity experiments

Thorsten Balke; Kertu Lõhmus; Helmut Hillebrand; Oliver Zielinski; Kristin Haynert; Daniela Meier; Dorothee Hodapp; Vanessa Minden; Michael Kleyer


Marine Biology | 2015

The body‑size structure of macrobenthos changes predictably along gradients of hydrodynamic stress and organic enrichment

Serena Donadi; Britas Klemens Eriksson; Karsten Lettmann; Dorothee Hodapp; Joerg-Olaf Wolff; Helmut Hillebrand

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Christian Stolle

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research

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