| Literature DB >> 29203922 |
Yann Hautier1, Forest Isbell2, Elizabeth T Borer2, Eric W Seabloom2, W Stanley Harpole3,4,5, Eric M Lind2, Andrew S MacDougall6, Carly J Stevens7, Peter B Adler8, Juan Alberti9, Jonathan D Bakker10, Lars A Brudvig11, Yvonne M Buckley12, Marc Cadotte13, Maria C Caldeira14, Enrique J Chaneton15, Chengjin Chu16, Pedro Daleo9, Christopher R Dickman17, John M Dwyer18,19, Anu Eskelinen3,4,20, Philip A Fay21, Jennifer Firn22, Nicole Hagenah23,24, Helmut Hillebrand25, Oscar Iribarne9, Kevin P Kirkman23, Johannes M H Knops26, Kimberly J La Pierre27, Rebecca L McCulley28, John W Morgan29, Meelis Pärtel30, Jesus Pascual9, Jodi N Price31, Suzanne M Prober32, Anita C Risch33, Mahesh Sankaran34,35, Martin Schuetz33, Rachel J Standish36, Risto Virtanen3,4,20, Glenda M Wardle17, Laura Yahdjian15, Andy Hector37.
Abstract
Biodiversity is declining in many local communities while also becoming increasingly homogenized across space. Experiments show that local plant species loss reduces ecosystem functioning and services, but the role of spatial homogenization of community composition and the potential interaction between diversity at different scales in maintaining ecosystem functioning remains unclear, especially when many functions are considered (ecosystem multifunctionality). We present an analysis of eight ecosystem functions measured in 65 grasslands worldwide. We find that more diverse grasslands-those with both species-rich local communities (α-diversity) and large compositional differences among localities (β-diversity)-had higher levels of multifunctionality. Moreover, α- and β-diversity synergistically affected multifunctionality, with higher levels of diversity at one scale amplifying the contribution to ecological functions at the other scale. The identity of species influencing ecosystem functioning differed among functions and across local communities, explaining why more diverse grasslands maintained greater functionality when more functions and localities were considered. These results were robust to variation in environmental drivers. Our findings reveal that plant diversity, at both local and landscape scales, contributes to the maintenance of multiple ecosystem services provided by grasslands. Preserving ecosystem functioning therefore requires conservation of biodiversity both within and among ecological communities.Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29203922 DOI: 10.1038/s41559-017-0395-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Ecol Evol ISSN: 2397-334X Impact factor: 15.460