| Literature DB >> 25600177 |
Alexandra J Wright1, Anne Ebeling2, Hans de Kroon3, Christiane Roscher4, Alexandra Weigelt5, Nina Buchmann6, Tina Buchmann7, Christine Fischer8, Nina Hacker9, Anke Hildebrandt8, Sophia Leimer10, Liesje Mommer11, Yvonne Oelmann9, Stefan Scheu12, Katja Steinauer13, Tanja Strecker12, Wolfgang Weisser14, Wolfgang Wilcke10, Nico Eisenhauer13.
Abstract
The natural world is increasingly defined by change. Within the next 100 years, rising atmospheric CO₂ concentrations will continue to increase the frequency and magnitude of extreme weather events. Simultaneously, human activities are reducing global biodiversity, with current extinction rates at ~1,000 × what they were before human domination of Earth's ecosystems. The co-occurrence of these trends may be of particular concern, as greater biological diversity could help ecosystems resist change during large perturbations. We use data from a 200-year flood event to show that when a disturbance is associated with an increase in resource availability, the opposite may occur. Flooding was associated with increases in productivity and decreases in stability, particularly in the highest diversity communities. Our results undermine the utility of the biodiversity-stability hypothesis during a large number of disturbances where resource availability increases. We propose a conceptual framework that can be widely applied during natural disturbances.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25600177 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms7092
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919