| Literature DB >> 26979952 |
Fons van der Plas1, Pete Manning2, Santiago Soliveres3, Eric Allan3, Michael Scherer-Lorenzen4, Kris Verheyen5, Christian Wirth6, Miguel A Zavala7, Evy Ampoorter5, Lander Baeten8, Luc Barbaro9, Jürgen Bauhus10, Raquel Benavides4, Adam Benneter10, Damien Bonal11, Olivier Bouriaud12, Helge Bruelheide13, Filippo Bussotti14, Monique Carnol15, Bastien Castagneyrol9, Yohan Charbonnier9, David Anthony Coomes16, Andrea Coppi14, Cristina C Bastias17, Seid Muhie Dawud18, Hans De Wandeler19, Timo Domisch20, Leena Finér20, Arthur Gessler21, André Granier11, Charlotte Grossiord22, Virginie Guyot23, Stephan Hättenschwiler24, Hervé Jactel9, Bogdan Jaroszewicz25, François-Xavier Joly24, Tommaso Jucker16, Julia Koricheva26, Harriet Milligan26, Sandra Mueller4, Bart Muys19, Diem Nguyen27, Martina Pollastrini14, Sophia Ratcliffe28, Karsten Raulund-Rasmussen18, Federico Selvi14, Jan Stenlid27, Fernando Valladares29, Lars Vesterdal18, Dawid Zielínski25, Markus Fischer30.
Abstract
Many experiments have shown that local biodiversity loss impairs the ability of ecosystems to maintain multiple ecosystem functions at high levels (multifunctionality). In contrast, the role of biodiversity in driving ecosystem multifunctionality at landscape scales remains unresolved. We used a comprehensive pan-European dataset, including 16 ecosystem functions measured in 209 forest plots across six European countries, and performed simulations to investigate how local plot-scale richness of tree species (α-diversity) and their turnover between plots (β-diversity) are related to landscape-scale multifunctionality. After accounting for variation in environmental conditions, we found that relationships between α-diversity and landscape-scale multifunctionality varied from positive to negative depending on the multifunctionality metric used. In contrast, when significant, relationships between β-diversity and landscape-scale multifunctionality were always positive, because a high spatial turnover in species composition was closely related to a high spatial turnover in functions that were supported at high levels. Our findings have major implications for forest management and indicate that biotic homogenization can have previously unrecognized and negative consequences for large-scale ecosystem multifunctionality.Keywords: FunDivEUROPE; biodiversity; ecosystem functioning; spatial scale; β-diversity
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26979952 PMCID: PMC4822601 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1517903113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205