Do experiments exploring plant diversity–ecosystem functioning relationships inform how biodiversity loss impacts natural ecosystems?

An enormous recent research effort focused on how plant biodiversity (notably species richness) influences ecosystem functioning, usually through experiments in which diversity is varied through random draws of species from a species pool. Such experiments are increasingly used to predict how specie...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of vegetation science Vol. 27; no. 3; pp. 646 - 653
Main Author: Wardle, David A.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Opulus Press 01-05-2016
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
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Summary:An enormous recent research effort focused on how plant biodiversity (notably species richness) influences ecosystem functioning, usually through experiments in which diversity is varied through random draws of species from a species pool. Such experiments are increasingly used to predict how species losses influence ecosystem functioning in ‘real’ ecosystems. However, this assumes that comparisons of experimental communities with low vs high species richness are analogous to comparisons of natural communities from which species either have or have not been lost. I explore the validity of this assumption, and highlight difficulties in using such experiments to draw conclusions about the ecosystem consequences of biodiversity loss in natural systems. Notably, these experiments do not mimic what happens in real ecosystems either when local extinctions occur or when species losses are offset by gains of new species. Despite limitations, this single experimental approach for studying how biodiversity loss affects ecosystems has often been advocated and implemented at the expense of other approaches; this limits understanding of how natural ecosystems respond to biodiversity loss. I conclude that a broader spectrum of approaches, and more explicit consideration of how species losses and gains operate in concert to influence ecosystems, will help progress this field.
Bibliography:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jvs.12399
ArticleID:JVS12399
Wallenberg Scholars
istex:E884F9C5F2604DC666DE36A71A9B93B85462C3CD
ark:/67375/WNG-SZ4T4PD2-G
ISSN:1100-9233
1654-1103
1654-1103
DOI:10.1111/jvs.12399