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Get Free AccessMany experiments have shown that biodiversity enhances ecosystem functioning. However, we have little understanding of how environmental heterogeneity shapes the effect of diversity on ecosystem functioning and to what extent this diversity effect is mediated by variation in species richness or species turnover. This knowledge is crucial to scaling up the results of experiments from local to regional scales. Here we quantify the diversity effect and its components—that is, the contributions of variation in species richness and species turnover—for 22 ecosystem functions of microorganisms, plants and animals across 13 major ecosystem types on Mt Kilimanjaro, Tanzania. Environmental heterogeneity across ecosystem types on average increased the diversity effect from explaining 49% to 72% of the variation in ecosystem functions. In contrast to our expectation, the diversity effect was more strongly mediated by variation in species richness than by species turnover. Our findings reveal that environmental heterogeneity strengthens the relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning and that species richness is a stronger driver of ecosystem functioning than species turnover. Based on a broad range of taxa and ecosystem functions in a non-experimental system, these results are in line with predictions from biodiversity experiments and emphasize that conserving biodiversity is essential for maintaining ecosystem functioning. The authors measure numerous ecosystem functions across an elevational gradient on Mt Kilimanjaro and find that species richness impacts function more than species turnover across sites. They also show that variation in species richness impacts ecosystem functioning more strongly at the landscape scale than at the local scale.
Jörg Albrecht, Marcell K. Peters, Joscha N. Becker, Christina Behler, Alice Claßen, Andreas Enßlin, Stefan W. Ferger, Friederike Gebert, Friederike Gerschlauer, Maria Helbig‐Bonitz, William J. Kindeketa, Anna Kühnel, Antonia V. Mayr, Henry K. Njovu, Holger Pabst, Ulf Pommer, Juliane Röder, Gemma Rutten, David Schellenberger Costa, Natalia Sierra Cornejo, Anna Vogeler, Maximilian G. R. Vollstädt, Hamadi I. Dulle, Connal Eardley, Kim M. Howell, Alexander Keller, Ralph S. Peters, Victor Kakengi, Claudia Hemp, Jie Zhang, Peter Manning, Thomas Mueller, Christina Bogner, Katrin Böhning‐Gaese, Roland Brandl, Dietrich Hertel, Bernd Huwe, Ralf Kiese, Michael Kleyer, Christoph Leuschner, Yakov Kuzyakov, Thomas Nauß, Marco Tschapka, Markus Fischer, Andreas Hemp, Ingolf Steffan‐Dewenter, Matthias Schleuning (2021). Species richness is more important for ecosystem functioning than species turnover along an elevational gradient. Nature Ecology & Evolution, 5(12), pp. 1582-1593, DOI: 10.1038/s41559-021-01550-9.
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Type
Article
Year
2021
Authors
47
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
Nature Ecology & Evolution
DOI
10.1038/s41559-021-01550-9
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