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Featured researches published by Felix Fornoff.


The American Naturalist | 2017

Ants at Plant Wounds: A Little-Known Trophic Interaction with Evolutionary Implications for Ant-Plant Interactions

Michael Staab; Felix Fornoff; Alexandra-Maria Klein; Nico Blüthgen

Extrafloral nectaries (EFNs) allow plants to engage in mutualisms with ants, preventing herbivory in exchange for food. EFNs occur scattered throughout the plant phylogeny and likely evolved independent from herbivore-created wounds subsequently visited by ants collecting leaked sap. Records of wound-feeding ants are, however, anecdotal. By surveying 38,000 trees from 40 species, we conducted the first quantitative ecological study of this overlooked behavior. Ant-wound interactions were widespread (0.5% of tree individuals) and occurred on 23 tree species. Interaction networks were opportunistic, closely resembling ant-EFN networks. Fagaceae, a family lacking EFNs, was strongly overrepresented. For Fagaceae, ant occurrence at wounds correlated with species-level leaf damage, potentially indicating that wounds may attract mutualistic ants, which supports the hypothesis of ant-tended wounds as precursors of ant-EFN mutualisms. Given that herbivore wounds are common, wound sap as a steadily available food source might further help to explain the overwhelming abundance of ants in (sub)tropical forest canopies.


Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences | 2017

Tree species richness attenuates the positive relationship between mutualistic ant–hemipteran interactions and leaf chewer herbivory

Andreas Schuldt; Felix Fornoff; Helge Bruelheide; Alexandra-Maria Klein; Michael Staab

Interactions across trophic levels influence plant diversity effects on ecosystem functions, but the complexity of these interactions remains poorly explored. For example, the interplay between different interactions (e.g. mutualism, predation) might be an important moderator of biodiversity–ecosystem function relationships. We tested for relationships between trophobioses (facultative ant–hemipteran mutualism) and leaf chewer herbivory in a subtropical forest biodiversity experiment. We analysed trophobiosis and herbivory data of more than 10 000 trees along a tree species richness gradient. Against expectations, chewing damage was higher on trees with trophobioses. However, the net positive relationship between trophobioses and overall herbivory depended on tree species richness, being most pronounced at low richness. Our results point to indirect, positive effects of ant-tended sap suckers on leaf chewers, potentially by altering plant defences. Direct antagonistic relationships of trophobiotic ants and leaf-chewing herbivores—frequently reported to drive community-wide effects of trophobioses in other ecosystems—seemed less relevant. However, antagonistic interactions likely contributed to the attenuating effect of tree species richness, because trophobiotic ant and herbivore communities changed from monocultures to species-rich mixtures. Our findings, therefore, suggest that biodiversity loss might lead to complex changes in higher trophic level effects on ecosystem functions, mediated by both trophic and non-trophic interactions.


Journal of Economic Entomology | 2018

Pollination of Granadilla (Passiflora ligularis) Benefits From Large Wild Insects

Catalina Gutiérrez-Chacón; Felix Fornoff; Rodulfo Ospina-Torres; Alexandra-Maria Klein

Abstract The contribution of wild pollinators to food production has recently been assessed for many crops, although it remains unclear for several tropical crops. Granadilla (Passiflora ligularis Juss), a crop native to the tropical Andes, is one such crop where a gap exists regarding comprehensive knowledge about its pollination system. In a field experiment in the Colombian Andes, we 1) describe flower visitors in terms of visit quantity (visitation rate) and quality (touches of flower-reproductive structures), 2) assess the pollination system by comparing fruit set and fruit weight per flower in three pollination treatments: pollinator exclusion, open pollination, and supplementary pollination, and 3) evaluate pollination deficits (difference between open and supplementary pollination) in relation to pollinator density. We observed 12 bee species visiting granadilla flowers, with Apis mellifera Linnaeus being the most frequent species. However, large bees such as Xylocopa lachnea Moure and Epicharis rustica Olivier touched stigmata and anthers more often. Fruit set and fruit weight per flower were significantly lower in the pollinator exclusion treatment compared to open and supplementary pollination, while the latter treatments showed nonsignificant differences. Pollination deficit significantly decreased with the increasing density of large bees and wasps. Our results illustrate the high dependency of granadilla on wild pollinating insects and highlight the crucial role of large insects to granadilla production.This stresses the need to maintain or increase the density of large pollinators in granadilla production areas, which in turn will necessitate better knowledge on their ecological requirements to inform landscape planning and population-management programs.


Current opinion in insect science | 2018

Relevance of wild and managed bees for human well-being

Alexandra-Maria Klein; Virginie Boreux; Felix Fornoff; Anne-Christine Mupepele; Gesine Pufal

Wild and managed bees provide pollination services to both crops and wild plants, and a variety of other services from which humans benefit. We summarize the most important and recent findings on bees as providers of provisioning, regulating and cultural ecosystem services. With comprehensive literature searches, we first identified ten important bee species for global pollination of crops, which include wild and managed honey bees, bumble bees, orchard-, cucumber- and longhorn bees. We second summarized bee-dependent ecosystem services to show how bees substantially contribute to food security, medical resources, soil formation or spiritual practices, highlighting their wide range of benefits for human well-being and to identify future research needs.


Archive | 2016

Abundance and species richness of flower visitors, flower trait functional diversity and flower trait community weighted mean in the Jena Experiment, 2006

Felix Fornoff; Christine Venjakob; Alexandra-Maria Klein; Anne Ebeling

Data was collected in the Main Experiment. Empty cells represent missing values that result from the design of the experiment. Empty cells result when the respective value does not occur in the design and could thus not be measured. For example, in the case of species-specific biomass cells are left blank, when the species was not sown in the respective plot.This datasets is part of a time series analysis about abundance and species richness of flower visitors, flower trait functional diversity and flower trait community in the Main Experiment since 2002 (doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.869777).


Oecologia | 2014

Induced defense mechanisms in an aquatic angiosperm to insect herbivory

Felix Fornoff; Elisabeth M. Gross


Oikos | 2017

Functional flower traits and their diversity drive pollinator visitation

Felix Fornoff; Alexandra-Maria Klein; Florian Hartig; Gita Benadi; Christine Venjakob; H. Martin Schaefer; Anne Ebeling


Systematic Entomology | 2018

Phylogenetic analysis of cuckoo wasps (Hymenoptera: Chrysididae) reveals a partially artificial classification at the genus level and a species-rich clade of bee parasitoids: Phylogeny and host associations of cuckoo wasps

Thomas Pauli; Ruth F. Castillo-Cajas; Paolo Rosa; Sandra Kukowka; Alexander Berg; Eric van den Berghe; Felix Fornoff; Sebastian Hopfenmüller; Manfred Niehuis; Ralph S. Peters; Michael Staab; Franco Strumia; Stefan Tischendorf; Thomas Schmitt; Oliver Niehuis


Basic and Applied Ecology | 2018

Intra- and interspecific tree diversity promotes multitrophic plant–Hemiptera–ant interactions in a forest diversity experiment

Huan-Xi Cao; Alexandra-Maria Klein; Chao-Dong Zhu; Michael Staab; Walter Durka; Markus Fischer; Felix Fornoff


Zootaxa | 2017

Notes on Kocourekia Bouček (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae: Tetrastichinae) with description of a new species from China

Huan-Xi Cao; Felix Fornoff; Peng-Fei Guo; Chao-Dong Zhu

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Chao-Dong Zhu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Huan-Xi Cao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Florian Hartig

University of Regensburg

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