“…However, grazing by one or more herds may enhance the multifunctionality and multidiversity in grassland ecosystems, thus causing an effect comparable to intermediate impacts (McGregor, 2010;Clement et al, 2018;. Such trend can be observed in the diversity of plant communities (Ross et al, 2016;Pakeman et al, 2019), flies (Clement et al, 2018), butterflies (Fraser et al, 2014), rodents (Evans et al, 2015;Li et al, 2019b), and birds (Fraser et al, 2014;Evans et al, 2015). This effect may have been observed only on Ambush hunters and Other hunters because, even though these guilds are known to hunt on the surface of flowers and leaves, with a higher dominance of families like Thomisidae and Salticidae than other families, they are also capable of adopting hunting strategies on the ground and other substrates, thus not relying only in one type of vegetation structure (Gomes et al, 2018;Joseph et al, 2018;Lyons et al, 2018b,c;da Silva Bomfim et al, 2021).…”