scholarly journals Tree diversity effects on forest productivity increase through time because of spatial partitioning

2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shinichi Tatsumi
Ecosystems ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 960-970 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alain Paquette ◽  
Jordi Vayreda ◽  
Lluís Coll ◽  
Christian Messier ◽  
Javier Retana

2020 ◽  
Vol 89 (8) ◽  
pp. 1775-1787
Author(s):  
Yanely May‐Uc ◽  
Colleen S. Nell ◽  
Víctor Parra‐Tabla ◽  
Jorge Navarro ◽  
Luis Abdala‐Roberts

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaime Madrigal-Gonzalez ◽  

<p>Increasing evidence now exists for a tight connection between tree diversity and carbon storage capacity. As part of the Paris Agreement (COP21), forests play a critical and prominent role to reach the ambitious goal of net-zero emissions in the second half of this century. Besides reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (also known as REDD), maintaining and enriching tree assemblages could thus help mitigating climate change via increased abundance and more efficient resource use.</p><p>However, recent evidence questions this widespread idea of positive diversity effects on forest carbon storage. Specifically, tree diversity may not always be a causal mechanism but rather a consequence of tree abundance and productivity (following the ‘more individuals hypothesis’). To test these contrasting hypotheses, this contribution analyses the most plausible causal pathways and their stability along global climatic gradients in the diversity-abundance relationship across the World’s main forest biomes, using a dataset comprising more than 2,500 forest plots and 83,800 trees sampled in pristine forest landscapes in all continents (except Antarctica).</p><p>We demonstrate that causal relations can be reconciled along global climate gradients, with diversity effects prevailing in the most productive environments, and abundance effects becoming dominant towards the most limiting conditions. These findings have major implications on climate change mitigation strategies aimed at carbon sequestration: we find that future nature-based mitigation solutions focused on fostering biodiversity will only be cost-effective in productive forest landscapes. In less productive environments, by contrast, mitigation measures should promote the abundance of locally adapted functional strategies. Conservation of species diversity in equatorial and tropical areas is thus a priority, not only to preserve the inherent value of biodiversity but also to achieve the global goals on atmospheric decarbonization. In less productive lands on Earth, the conservation of abundance through productivity should be posed, next to diversity, as a major element in environmental policies and land management.</p><p> </p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 433 ◽  
pp. 287-294 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bastien Castagneyrol ◽  
Brice Giffard ◽  
Elena Valdés-Correcher ◽  
Arndt Hampe

Authorea ◽  
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liting Zheng ◽  
Han Y H Chen ◽  
Shekhar Biswas ◽  
Difeng Bao ◽  
Xiaochen Fang ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carsten F. Dormann ◽  
Helge Schneider ◽  
Jonas Gorges

AbstractThe publication of Liang et al. (2016, Science) seems to demonstrate very clearly that increasing tree species richness substantially increases forest productivity. To combine data from very different ecoregions, the authors constructed a relative measure of tree species richness. This relative richness however confounds plot-level tree species richness and the polar-tropical gradient of tree species richness. We re-analysed their orginal data, computing a regional measure of tree species richness and addressing several other issues in their analysis. We find that there is virtually no effect of relative tree species richness on productivity when computing species richness at the local scale. Also, different ecoregions have very different relationships between tree species richness and productivity. Thus, neither the “global” consistency nor the actual effect can be confirmed.


Author(s):  
Stefan Trogisch ◽  
Xiaojuan Liu ◽  
Gemma Rutten ◽  
Helge Bruelheide

2019 ◽  
Vol 286 (1898) ◽  
pp. 20182399 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felix Fornoff ◽  
Alexandra-Maria Klein ◽  
Nico Blüthgen ◽  
Michael Staab

Multi-trophic interactions maintain critical ecosystem functions. Biodiversity is declining globally, while responses of trophic interactions to biodiversity change are largely unclear. Thus, studying responses of multi-trophic interaction robustness to biodiversity change is crucial for understanding ecosystem functioning and persistence. We investigate plant–Hemiptera (antagonism) and Hemiptera–ant (mutualism) interaction networks in response to experimental manipulation of tree diversity. We show increased diversity at both higher trophic levels (Hemiptera and ants) and increased robustness through redundancy of lower level species of multi-trophic interactions when tree diversity increased. Hemiptera and ant diversity increased with tree diversity through non-additive diversity effects. Network analyses identified that tree diversity also increased the number of tree and Hemiptera species used by Hemiptera and ant species, and decreased the specialization on lower trophic level species in both mutualistic and antagonist interactions. Our results demonstrate that bottom-up effects of tree diversity ascend through trophic levels regardless of interaction type. Thus, local tree diversity is a key driver of multi-trophic community diversity and interaction robustness in forests.


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