Literature DB >> 22486095

Cascading effects of long-term land-use changes on plant traits and ecosystem functioning.

Etienne Laliberté1, Jason M Tylianakis.   

Abstract

There is much concern that the functioning of ecosystems will be affected by human-induced changes in biodiversity, of which land-use change is the most important driver. However, changes in biodiversity may be only one of many pathways through which land use alters ecosystem functioning, and its importance relative to other pathways remains unclear. In particular, although biodiversity-ecosystem function research has focused primarily on grasslands, the increases in agricultural inputs (e.g., fertilization, irrigation) and grazing pressure that drive change in grasslands worldwide have been largely ignored. Here we show that long-term (27-year) manipulations of soil resource availability and sheep grazing intensity caused marked, consistent shifts in grassland plant functional composition and diversity, with cascading (i.e., causal chains of) direct, indirect, and interactive effects on multiple ecosystem functions. Resource availability exerted dominant control over above-ground net primary production (ANPP), both directly and indirectly via shifts in plant functional composition. Importantly, the effects of plant functional diversity and grazing intensity on ANPP shifted from negative to positive as agricultural inputs increased, providing strong evidence that soil resource availability modulates the impacts of plant diversity and herbivory on primary production. These changes in turn altered litter decomposition and, ultimately, soil carbon sequestration, highlighting the relevance of ANPP as a key integrator of ecosystem functioning. Our study reveals how human alterations of bottom-up (resources) and top-down (herbivory) forces together interact to control the functioning of grazing systems, the most extensive land use on Earth.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22486095     DOI: 10.1890/11-0338.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  23 in total

1.  Burrowing seabird effects on invertebrate communities in soil and litter are dominated by ecosystem engineering rather than nutrient addition.

Authors:  Kate H Orwin; David A Wardle; David R Towns; Mark G St John; Peter J Bellingham; Chris Jones; Brian M Fitzgerald; Richard G Parrish; Phil O'B Lyver
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2015-09-26       Impact factor: 3.225

2.  Relative contribution of soil, management and traits to co-variations of multiple ecosystem properties in grasslands.

Authors:  Pierre Gos; Grégory Loucougaray; Marie-Pascale Colace; Cindy Arnoldi; Stéphanie Gaucherand; Daphné Dumazel; Lucie Girard; Sarah Delorme; Sandra Lavorel
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2016-01-30       Impact factor: 3.225

3.  Nutrient enrichment, biodiversity loss, and consequent declines in ecosystem productivity.

Authors:  Forest Isbell; Peter B Reich; David Tilman; Sarah E Hobbie; Stephen Polasky; Seth Binder
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2013-07-01       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  A long-term experimental test of the dynamic equilibrium model of species diversity.

Authors:  Etienne Laliberté; Hans Lambers; David A Norton; Jason M Tylianakis; Michael A Huston
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2012-07-26       Impact factor: 3.225

5.  Interactions between plant genome size, nutrients and herbivory by rabbits, molluscs and insects on a temperate grassland.

Authors:  Maïté S Guignard; Michael J Crawley; Dasha Kovalenko; Richard A Nichols; Mark Trimmer; Andrew R Leitch; Ilia J Leitch
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2019-03-27       Impact factor: 5.349

6.  Species richness and biomass explain spatial turnover in ecosystem functioning across tropical and temperate ecosystems.

Authors:  Andrew D Barnes; Patrick Weigelt; Malte Jochum; David Ott; Dorothee Hodapp; Noor Farikhah Haneda; Ulrich Brose
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2016-05-19       Impact factor: 6.237

7.  Plant traits alone are poor predictors of ecosystem properties and long-term ecosystem functioning.

Authors:  Fons van der Plas; Thomas Schröder-Georgi; Alexandra Weigelt; Kathryn Barry; Sebastian Meyer; Adriana Alzate; Romain L Barnard; Nina Buchmann; Hans de Kroon; Anne Ebeling; Nico Eisenhauer; Christof Engels; Markus Fischer; Gerd Gleixner; Anke Hildebrandt; Eva Koller-France; Sophia Leimer; Alexandru Milcu; Liesje Mommer; Pascal A Niklaus; Yvonne Oelmann; Christiane Roscher; Christoph Scherber; Michael Scherer-Lorenzen; Stefan Scheu; Bernhard Schmid; Ernst-Detlef Schulze; Vicky Temperton; Teja Tscharntke; Winfried Voigt; Wolfgang Weisser; Wolfgang Wilcke; Christian Wirth
Journal:  Nat Ecol Evol       Date:  2020-10-05       Impact factor: 15.460

Review 8.  Phosphorus-mobilization ecosystem engineering: the roles of cluster roots and carboxylate exudation in young P-limited ecosystems.

Authors:  Hans Lambers; John G Bishop; Stephen D Hopper; Etienne Laliberté; Alejandra Zúñiga-Feest
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2012-06-13       Impact factor: 4.357

9.  Metabolic profiling of Lolium perenne shows functional integration of metabolic responses to diverse subtoxic conditions of chemical stress.

Authors:  Anne-Antonella Serra; Ivan Couée; David Renault; Gwenola Gouesbet; Cécile Sulmon
Journal:  J Exp Bot       Date:  2015-01-24       Impact factor: 6.992

10.  Functional diversity enhances the resistance of ecosystem multifunctionality to aridity in Mediterranean drylands.

Authors:  Enrique Valencia; Fernando T Maestre; Yoann Le Bagousse-Pinguet; José Luis Quero; Riin Tamme; Luca Börger; Miguel García-Gómez; Nicolas Gross
Journal:  New Phytol       Date:  2015-01-23       Impact factor: 10.151

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