Login / Signup

The influence of balanced and imbalanced resource supply on biodiversity-functioning relationship across ecosystems.

Aleksandra M LewandowskaAntje BiermannElizabeth T BorerMiguel A Cebrián-PiquerasSteven A J DeclerckLuc De MeesterEllen Van DonkLars GamfeldtDaniel S GrunerNicole HagenahW Stanley HarpoleKevin P KirkmanChristopher A KlausmeierMichael KleyerJohannes M H KnopsPieter LemmensEric M LindElena LitchmanJasmin Mantilla-ContrerasKoen MartensSandra MeierVanessa MindenJoslin L MooreHarry Olde VenterinkEric W SeabloomUlrich SommerMaren StriebelAnastasia TrenkampJuliane TrinoggaJotaro UrabeWim VyvermanDedmer B Van de WaalClaire E WiddicombeHelmut Hillebrand
Published in: Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences (2017)
Numerous studies show that increasing species richness leads to higher ecosystem productivity. This effect is often attributed to more efficient portioning of multiple resources in communities with higher numbers of competing species, indicating the role of resource supply and stoichiometry for biodiversity-ecosystem functioning relationships. Here, we merged theory on ecological stoichiometry with a framework of biodiversity-ecosystem functioning to understand how resource use transfers into primary production. We applied a structural equation model to define patterns of diversity-productivity relationships with respect to available resources. Meta-analysis was used to summarize the findings across ecosystem types ranging from aquatic ecosystems to grasslands and forests. As hypothesized, resource supply increased realized productivity and richness, but we found significant differences between ecosystems and study types. Increased richness was associated with increased productivity, although this effect was not seen in experiments. More even communities had lower productivity, indicating that biomass production is often maintained by a few dominant species, and reduced dominance generally reduced ecosystem productivity. This synthesis, which integrates observational and experimental studies in a variety of ecosystems and geographical regions, exposes common patterns and differences in biodiversity-functioning relationships, and increases the mechanistic understanding of changes in ecosystems productivity.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • human health
  • systematic review
  • risk assessment
  • case control
  • randomized controlled trial
  • wastewater treatment