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  3. Plant diversity enhances ecosystem multifunctionality via multitrophic diversity.
 

Plant diversity enhances ecosystem multifunctionality via multitrophic diversity.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/8417
Date of Publication
November 2024
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institute of Plant Sc...

Contributor
Li, Yi
Schuldt, Andreas
Ebeling, Anne
Eisenhauer, Nico
Huang, Yuanyuan
Albert, Georg
Albracht, Cynthia
Amyntas, Angelos
Bonkowski, Michael
Bruelheide, Helge
Bröcher, Maximilian
Chesters, Douglas
Chen, Jun
Chen, Yannan
Chen, Jing-Ting
Ciobanu, Marcel
Deng, Xianglu
Fornoff, Felix
Gleixner, Gerd
Guo, Liangdong
Guo, Peng-Fei
Heintz-Buschart, Anna
Klein, Alexandra-Maria
Lange, Markus
Li, Shan
Li, Qi
Li, Yingbin
Luo, Arong
Meyer, Sebastian T
von Oheimb, Goddert
Rutten, Gemma
Institute of Plant Sciences (IPS)
Scholten, Thomas
Solbach, Marcel D
Staab, Michael
Wang, Ming-Qiang
Zhang, Naili
Zhu, Chao-Dong
Schmid, Bernhard
Ma, Keping
Liu, Xiaojuan
Subject(s)

500 - Science::580 - ...

Series
Nature Ecology & Evolution
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2397-334X
Publisher
Nature Research
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1038/s41559-024-02517-2
PubMed ID
39209981
Description
Ecosystem functioning depends on biodiversity at multiple trophic levels, yet relationships between multitrophic diversity and ecosystem multifunctionality have been poorly explored, with studies often focusing on individual trophic levels and functions and on specific ecosystem types. Here, we show that plant diversity can affect ecosystem functioning both directly and by affecting other trophic levels. Using data on 13 trophic groups and 13 ecosystem functions from two large biodiversity experiments-one representing temperate grasslands and the other subtropical forests-we found that plant diversity increases multifunctionality through elevated multitrophic diversity. Across both experiments, the association between multitrophic diversity and multifunctionality was stronger than the relationship between the diversity of individual trophic groups and multifunctionality. Our results also suggest that the role of multitrophic diversity is greater in forests than in grasslands. These findings imply that, to promote sustained ecosystem multifunctionality, conservation planning must consider the diversity of both plants and higher trophic levels.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/44719
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File(s)
FileFile TypeFormatSizeLicensePublisher/Copright statementContent
s41559-024-02517-2.pdftextAdobe PDF3.87 MBPublisher holds Copyrightpublished restricted
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