My current research is a NERC fellowship. I am examining the importance and sensitivity of biodiversity by linking the species into their communities within their landscape and, for the first time, considering the different life stages of the species. I aim to address the following questions:
Studies of adult insects as pollinators rarely consider larval stages -
the larvae of this species of hoverfly (Rhingia campestris) feed in dung.
There is, quite rightly, much concern expressed over the future of animal and plant species; for example the decline in farmland birds or the increasing rarity of many plants and insects. However, each species does not exist in isolation. Instead, one species interacts with other species, and those species, in turn, interact with yet others and so they form highly complex ecological networks, such as food webs.
Usually studies are focussed on either species or whole networks, but I will take an integrated approach by considering both, for example, by examining the biology and sensitivity of species in the context of their place in ecological networks (how well connected they are into the network). I will address this in asking the following questions:
However, changes in the abundance of species and how well connected they are in networks in turn affect the structure of whole networks. Therefore knowing the identity of individual species in the networks will help us to understand ecological networks better, even though in many previous studies species' identity has not been considered.
In this study I will investigate ecological networks in grassland and woodland patches. The patches I will study are the fragments of habitat that remain, and they vary both in their size and how close they are to other patches. I will study two different ecological networks in these patches: one is the network of flowers and the insects that visit and pollinate them, and the other is the network of plants, aphids and aphid predators. I will measure how well connected each species is in a network and relate this to
I will also ask how habitat fragmentation affects whole networks and whether it makes them less resilient to the extinction of species.
Hoverflies feature in both these networks since adults are flower visitors and the larvae of many species feed on aphids. Therefore I will ask whether a larva that is well connected into its food web gives rise to an adult that is well connected into its plant-pollinator network. The two networks will be linked through their shared species (hoverflies and plants) raising the possibility of extinction 'vortices' in the networks, where the loss of one species causes the loss of others that are dependent on it, and the loss of yet more species dependent on those, and so on cycling through the two linked networks.
Often studies examining the effects of environmental change on biodiversity consider only individual species or whole networks. By taking an integrated approach I will provide a novel understanding of how species and ecological networks influence each other to affect biodiversity as a whole.
Photo header: A cistus forester moth (Adscita geryon) visiting Bird's-foot Trefoil (Lotus corniculatus) flowers. Both the moth and the flower are charasteristic species of chalk and limestone grassland.