| Literature DB >> 24688865 |
Mark A Genung1, Jennifer A Schweitzer1, Joseph K Bailey1.
Abstract
The relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem function has received a great deal of attention in ecological research and recent results, from re-analyses, suggest that ecosystem function improves with increases in phylogenetic diversity. However, many of these results have been generalized across a range of different species and clades, and plants with different evolutionary histories could display different relationships between biodiversity and ecosystem function. To experimentally test this hypothesis, we manipulated species richness and phylogenetic diversity using 26 species from two subgenera of the genus Eucalyptus (subgenus Eucalyptus and subgenus Symphyomyrtus). We found that plant biomass (a measurement of ecosystem function) sometimes, but not always, responded to increases in species richness and phylogenetic diversity. Specifically, Symphyomyrtus plants showed a positive response while no comparable effect was observed for Eucalyptus plants, showing that responses to biodiversity can vary across different phylogenetic groups. Our results show that the impacts of evolutionary history may complicate the relationship between the diversity of plant communities and plant biomass.Entities:
Keywords: Biodiversity; Ecosystem function; Evolutionary history; Phylogeny; Species interactions; Species richness
Year: 2014 PMID: 24688865 PMCID: PMC3961147 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.288
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Species richness, phylogenetic diversity, and subgenus identity affect plant productivity and survival.
“Species richness” is a continuous variable with three levels (1, 3, and 6). “Phylogenetic diversity” is a categorical variable with three levels (species monocultures, within-subgenus mixtures, between-subgenera mixtures). Within-subgenus and between-subgenera mixtures can include 3 or 6 species; the difference is whether those species come from one subgenus or two. The term subgenus describes differences between plants within subgenus Eucalyptus and subgenus Symphyomyrtus. Plant height and stem diameter were continuous responses, and we used REML models with species identity and pot number as random effects. “df Den.” is an abbreviation for denominator degrees of freedom, and shows the degrees of freedom that causes the distribution of the test statistic to most closely match the F distribution. Bold, italicized p-values are significant at α = 0.05.
| Species richness model | df Den. | F | p | df Den. | F | p |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Species Richness (SR) | 56.12 | 9.029 |
| 63.63 | 12.300 |
|
| Subgenus | 23.72 | 0.834 | 0.370 | 24.82 | 2.407 | 0.134 |
| SR ∗ Subgenus | 66.02 | 2.502 | 0.119 | 78.09 | 5.657 |
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| Species Richness (SR) | 69.77 | 2.572 | 0.113 | 63.65 | 12.193 |
|
| Subgenus | 21.92 | 2.528 | 0.126 | 24.72 | 2.269 | 0.145 |
| SR ∗ Subgenus | 96.49 | 6.276 |
| 77.64 | 5.668 |
|
Figure 1The effects of species richness on plant biomass and survival are dependent on subgenus identity.
The species richness manipulation included monocultures (species richness = 1), 3-species mixtures, and 6-species mixtures. Plant height (A), stem diameter (B), and biomass (D) responded positively to increasing species richness, but only in subgenus Symphyomyrtus (open circles and dashed lines). Survival (C) responded negatively to increasing species richness, but only in subgenus Eucalyptus (closed circles and solid lines).
Figure 2The effects of phylogenetic diversity on plant biomass and survival are dependent on subgenus identity.
The phylogenetic diversity manipulation included monocultures, within-subgenus mixtures (with species richness of either 3 or 6), and between-subgenera mixtures (with species richness of either 3 or 6). Plant height (A), stem diameter (B), and biomass (D) responded positively to increasing phylogenetic diversity, but only in subgenus Symphyomyrtus. Survival (C) responded negatively to increasing phylogenetic diversity, but only in subgenus Eucalyptus. Letters indicate the results of pairwise contrasts within each subgenus (uppercase for Eucalyptus, lowercase for Symphyomyrtus); groups with different letters are significantly different; to account for multiple tests, we controlled the False Discovery Rate at 0.05.
Pairwise contrasts show that different levels of phylogenetic diversity affect plant traits.
The phylogenetic diversity manipulation included monocultures, within-subgenus mixtures (with species richness of either 3 or 6), and between-subgenera mixtures (with species richness of either 3 or 6). The first column describes the two levels of phylogenetic diversity being compared; the next four columns show p-values for different plant traits. The first set of contrasts tests differences for the main effect of phylogenetic diversity. The second and third sets of contrasts test differences for the interactive effect of subgenus identity by phylogenetic diversity. Bold, italicized p-values are significant at α = 0.05 and (+) symbols show which category showed a higher mean value for the listed plant traits.
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|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monoculture & Within-Subgenus (+) |
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| 0.701 |
|
| Monoculture (+) & Between-Subgenus | 0.217 | 0.605 |
| 0.571 |
| Within-Subgenus (+) & Between-Subgenus | 0.968 | 0.268 |
| 0.301 |
| 0.831 | 0.708 | 0.445 | 0.760 | |
| 0.516 | 0.879 |
| 0.911 | |
| 0.580 | 0.762 |
| 0.815 | |
|
|
| 0.781 |
| |
| 0.245 | 0.325 | 0.277 | 0.312 | |
| 0.574 | 0.165 | 0.242 | 0.178 | |
| 0.141 |
| 0.907 |
| |
| 0.701 | 0.608 | 0.299 | 0.585 | |
| 0.599 | 0.666 |
| 0.665 |