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  3. Effects of biodiversity strengthen over time as ecosystem functioning declines at low and increases at high biodiversity
 

Effects of biodiversity strengthen over time as ecosystem functioning declines at low and increases at high biodiversity

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.92919
Date of Publication
December 2016
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Pflanzen...

Author
Meyer, Sebastian T.
Ebeling, Anne
Eisenhauer, Nico
Hertzog, Lionel
Hillebrand, Helmut
Milcu, Alexandru
Pompe, Sven
Abbas, Maike
Bessler, Holger
Buchmann, Nina
De Luca, Enrica
Engels, Christof
Fischer, Markus
Institut für Pflanzenwissenschaften (IPS)
Gleixner, Gerd
Hudewenz, Anika
Klein, Alexandra-Maria
de Kroon, Hans
Leimer, Sophia
Loranger, Hannah
Mommer, Liesje
Oelmann, Yvonne
Ravenek, Janneke M.
Roscher, Christiane
Rottstock, Tanja
Scherber, Christoph
Scherer-Lorenzen, Michael
Scheu, Stefan
Schmid, Bernhard
Schulze, Ernst-Detlef
Staudler, Andrea
Strecker, Tanja
Temperton, Vicky
Tscharntke, Teja
Vogel, Anja
Voigt, Winfried
Weigelt, Alexandra
Wilcke, Wolfgang
Weisser, Wolfgang W.
Subject(s)

500 - Science::580 - ...

Series
Ecosphere
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2150-8925
Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1002/ecs2.1619
Uncontrolled Keywords

biodiversity ecosyste...

ecosystem processes

grassland

mechanism

plant productivity

plant species richnes...

temporal effects

trophic interactions

Description
Human-caused declines in biodiversity have stimulated intensive research on the consequences of biodiversity loss for ecosystem services and policy initiatives to preserve the functioning of ecosystems. Short-term biodiversity experiments have documented positive effects of plant species richness on many ecosystem functions, and longer-term studies indicate, for some ecosystem functions, that biodiversity effects can become stronger over time. Theoretically, a biodiversity effect can strengthen over time by an increasing performance of high-diversity communities, by a decreasing performance of low-diversity communities, or a combination of both processes. Which of these two mechanisms prevail, and whether the increase in the biodiversity effect over time is a general property of many functions remains currently unclear. These questions are an important knowledge gap as a continuing decline in the performance of low-diversity communities would indicate an ecosystem-service debt resulting from delayed effects of species loss on ecosystem functioning. Conversely, an increased performance of high-diversity communities over time would indicate that the benefits of biodiversity are generally underestimated in short-term studies. Analyzing 50 ecosystem variables over 11 years in the world's largest grassland biodiversity experiment, we show that overall plant diversity effects strengthened over time. Strengthening biodiversity effects were independent of the considered compartment (above- or belowground), organizational level (ecosystem variables associated with the abiotic habitat, primary producers, or higher trophic levels such as herbivores and pollinators), and variable type (measurements of pools or rates). We found evidence that biodiversity effects strengthened because of both a progressive decrease in functioning in species-poor and a progressive increase in functioning in species-rich communities. Our findings provide evidence that negative feedback effects at low biodiversity are as important for biodiversity effects as complementarity among species at high biodiversity. Finally, our results indicate that a current loss of species will result in a future impairment of ecosystem functioning, potentially decades beyond the moment of species extinction.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/148017
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2016_Ecosphere_7_e01619.pdftextAdobe PDF2.42 MBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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