| Literature DB >> 21618909 |
Stefan A Schnitzer1, John N Klironomos, Janneke Hillerislambers, Linda L Kinkel, Peter B Reich, Kun Xiao, Matthias C Rillig, Benjamin A Sikes, Ragan M Callaway, Scott A Mangan, Egbert H van Nes, Marten Scheffer.
Abstract
Ecosystem productivity commonly increases asymptotically with plant species diversity, and determining the mechanisms responsible for this well-known pattern is essential to predict potential changes in ecosystem productivity with ongoing species loss. Previous studies attributed the asymptotic diversity-productivity pattern to plant competition and differential resource use (e.g., niche complementarity). Using an analytical model and a series of experiments, we demonstrate theoretically and empirically that host-specific soil microbes can be major determinants of the diversity-productivity relationship in grasslands. In the presence of soil microbes, plant disease decreased with increasing diversity, and productivity increased nearly 500%, primarily because of the strong effect of density-dependent disease on productivity at low diversity. Correspondingly, disease was higher in plants grown in conspecific-trained soils than heterospecific-trained soils (demonstrating host-specificity), and productivity increased and host-specific disease decreased with increasing community diversity, suggesting that disease was the primary cause of reduced productivity in species-poor treatments. In sterilized, microbe-free soils, the increase in productivity with increasing plant species number was markedly lower than the increase measured in the presence of soil microbes, suggesting that niche complementarity was a weaker determinant of the diversity-productivity relationship. Our results demonstrate that soil microbes play an integral role as determinants of the diversity-productivity relationship.Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21618909 DOI: 10.1890/10-0773.1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecology ISSN: 0012-9658 Impact factor: 5.499