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Remote spectral detection of biodiversity effects on forest biomass.

Laura J WilliamsJeannine Cavender-BaresPhilip A TownsendJohn J CoutureZhihui WangArtur StefanskiChristian MessierPeter B Reich
Published in: Nature ecology & evolution (2020)
Quantifying how biodiversity affects ecosystem functions through time over large spatial extents is needed for meeting global biodiversity goals yet is infeasible with field-based approaches alone. Imaging spectroscopy is a tool with potential to help address this challenge. Here, we demonstrate a spectral approach to assess biodiversity effects in young forests that provides insight into its underlying drivers. Using airborne imaging of a tree-diversity experiment, spectral differences among stands enabled us to quantify net biodiversity effects on stem biomass and canopy nitrogen. By subsequently partitioning these effects, we reveal how distinct processes contribute to diversity-induced differences in stand-level spectra, chemistry and biomass. Across stands, biomass overyielding was best explained by species with greater leaf nitrogen dominating upper canopies in mixtures, rather than intraspecific shifts in canopy structure or chemistry. Remote imaging spectroscopy may help to detect the form and drivers of biodiversity-ecosystem function relationships across space and time, advancing the capacity to monitor and manage Earth's ecosystems.
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