| Literature DB >> 35042423 |
Léo Delalandre1, Pierre Gaüzère2, Wilfried Thuiller2, Marc Cadotte3, Nicolas Mouquet4,5, David Mouillot4, François Munoz6, Pierre Denelle7, Nicolas Loiseau4, Xavier Morin1, Cyrille Violle1.
Abstract
Despite evidence of a positive effect of functional diversity on ecosystem productivity, the importance of functionally distinct species (i.e. species that display an original combination of traits) is poorly understood. To investigate how distinct species affect ecosystem productivity, we used a forest-gap model to simulate realistic temperate forest successions along an environmental gradient and measured ecosystem productivity at the end of the successional trajectories. We performed 10 560 simulations with different sets and numbers of species, bearing either distinct or indistinct functional traits, and compared them to random assemblages, to mimic the consequences of a regional loss of species. Long-term ecosystem productivity dropped when distinct species were lost first from the regional pool of species, under the harshest environmental conditions. On the contrary, productivity was more dependent on ordinary species in milder environments. Our findings show that species functional distinctiveness, integrating multiple trait dimensions, can capture species-specific effects on ecosystem productivity. In a context of an environmentally changing world, they highlight the need to investigate the role of distinct species in sustaining ecosystem processes, particularly in extreme environmental conditions.Entities:
Keywords: biodiversity and ecosystem functioning; forest-gap model; functional distinctiveness; functional rarity; productivity; virtual ecology
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35042423 PMCID: PMC8767214 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2021.1694
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349