Back to Search Start Over

The results of biodiversity-ecosystem functioning experiments are realistic

Authors :
Jochum, Malte
Fischer, Markus
Isbell, Forest
Roscher, Christiane
Van Der Plas, Fons
Boch, Steffen
Boenisch, Gerhard
Buchmann, Nina
Catford, Jane A.
Cavender-Bares, Jeannine
Ebeling, Anne
Eisenhauer, Nico
Gleixner, Gerd
Hölzel, Norbert
Kattge, Jens
Klaus, Valentin H.
Kleinebecker, Till
Lange, Markus
Le Provost, Gaëtane
Meyer, Sebastian T.
Molina Venegas, Rafael
Mommer, Liesje
Oelmann, Yvonne
Penone, Caterina
Prati, Daniel
Reich, Peter B.
Rindisbacher, Abiel
Schäfer, Deborah
Scheu, Stefan
Schmid, Bernhard
Tilman, David
Tscharntke, Teja
Vogel, Anja
Cameron, Wagg
Alexandra, Weigelt
Weisser, Wolfgang W.
Wilcke, Wolfgang
Manning, Peter
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Abstract

A large body of research shows that biodiversity loss can reduce ecosystem functioning, thus providing support for the conservation of biological diversity1–4. Much of the evidence for this relationship is drawn from biodiversity-ecosystem functioning experiments (hereafter: biodiversity experiments), in which biodiversity loss is simulated by randomly assembling communities of varying species diversity, and ecosystem functions are measured5–9. This random assembly has led some ecologists to question the relevance of biodiversity experiments to real-world ecosystems, where community assembly may often be non-random and influenced by external drivers, such as climate or land-use intensification10–18. Despite these repeated criticisms, there has been no comprehensive, quantitative assessment of how experimental and real-world plant communities really differ, and whether these differences invalidate the experimental results. Here, we compare data from two of the largest and longest-running grassland biodiversity experiments globally (Jena Experiment, Germany; BioDIV, USA) to related real-world grassland plant communities in terms of their taxonomic, functional, and phylogenetic diversity and functional-trait composition. We found that plant communities of biodiversity experiments have greater variance in these compositional features than their real-world counterparts, covering almost all of the variation of the real-world communities (82-96%) while also containing community types that are not currently observed in the real world. We then re-analysed a subset of experimental data that included only ecologically-realistic communities, i.e. those comparable to real-world communities. For ten out of twelve biodiversity-ecosystem functioning relationships, biodiversity effects did not differ significantly between the full dataset of biodiversity experiments and the ecologically-realistic subset of experimental communities. This demonstrates that the results of biodiversity experiments are largely insensitive to the inclusion/exclusion of unrealistic communities. By bridging the gap between experimental and real-world studies, these results demonstrate the validity of inferences from biodiversity experiments, a key step in translating their results into specific recommendations for real-world biodiversity management.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ec646213971fb9afb83353838b9f29b3