| Literature DB >> 26466564 |
Forest Isbell1, Dylan Craven2,3, John Connolly4, Michel Loreau5, Bernhard Schmid6, Carl Beierkuhnlein7, T Martijn Bezemer8, Catherine Bonin9, Helge Bruelheide2,10, Enrica de Luca6, Anne Ebeling11, John N Griffin12, Qinfeng Guo13, Yann Hautier14, Andy Hector15, Anke Jentsch16, Jürgen Kreyling17, Vojtěch Lanta18, Pete Manning19, Sebastian T Meyer20, Akira S Mori21, Shahid Naeem22, Pascal A Niklaus6, H Wayne Polley23, Peter B Reich24,25, Christiane Roscher2,26, Eric W Seabloom1, Melinda D Smith27, Madhav P Thakur2,3, David Tilman1,28, Benjamin F Tracy29, Wim H van der Putten8,30, Jasper van Ruijven31, Alexandra Weigelt2,3, Wolfgang W Weisser20, Brian Wilsey32, Nico Eisenhauer2,3.
Abstract
It remains unclear whether biodiversity buffers ecosystems against climate extremes, which are becoming increasingly frequent worldwide. Early results suggested that the ecosystem productivity of diverse grassland plant communities was more resistant, changing less during drought, and more resilient, recovering more quickly after drought, than that of depauperate communities. However, subsequent experimental tests produced mixed results. Here we use data from 46 experiments that manipulated grassland plant diversity to test whether biodiversity provides resistance during and resilience after climate events. We show that biodiversity increased ecosystem resistance for a broad range of climate events, including wet or dry, moderate or extreme, and brief or prolonged events. Across all studies and climate events, the productivity of low-diversity communities with one or two species changed by approximately 50% during climate events, whereas that of high-diversity communities with 16-32 species was more resistant, changing by only approximately 25%. By a year after each climate event, ecosystem productivity had often fully recovered, or overshot, normal levels of productivity in both high- and low-diversity communities, leading to no detectable dependence of ecosystem resilience on biodiversity. Our results suggest that biodiversity mainly stabilizes ecosystem productivity, and productivity-dependent ecosystem services, by increasing resistance to climate events. Anthropogenic environmental changes that drive biodiversity loss thus seem likely to decrease ecosystem stability, and restoration of biodiversity to increase it, mainly by changing the resistance of ecosystem productivity to climate events.Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26466564 DOI: 10.1038/nature15374
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962