I was lucky enough to be part of a paper just published in Nature by Jim Grace et al. where we argue that the interplay between these factors is more fully understood when both are placed in a rich network of cause-and-effect pathways, as opposed to being regarded as entities engaged in an isolated back-and-forth.
We considered data generated by the Nutrient Network, a global scientific cooperative that examined 40+ grass-dominated plant communities from across the planet. Indeed, we used data from over a thousand grassland plots spanning five continents.
Location of the NutNet study sites across the world |
1. the rate of biomass production increases with the number of species found at a site (its species richness). This effect holds steady across the observed variation in species richness, instead of saturating in communities with greater richness, as a generation of experimental and theoretical work has suggested that it may.
2. with increasing accumulated above-ground biomass (live plant tissue and dead litter) species richness declines. We think this provides evidence that competition between species — primarily for light — is an important force in determining why communities contain as many species as they do. Competition seemed to be influential regardless of how productive a community was, contrary to the historical suggestion that competition is a stronger structuring force in more-productive communities.
These results show that
you cannot have sustainable, productive ecosystems without maintaining
biodiversity in the landscape. Indeed, as
Debra Willard, Coordinator for
the USGS Climate Research & Development Program, put it: “These results suggest
that if climate change leads to reduced species or genetic diversity, which is a
real possibility, that then could lead to a reduced capacity for ecosystems to
respond to additional stresses.”
One of the Australian NutNet sites, from Western Australia |
Further information: Grace et al. (2016) Integrative modelling reveals mechanisms linking productivity and plant species richness. Nature doi:10.1038/nature16524
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