Effects of plant diversity on productivity strengthen over time due to trait-dependent shifts in species overyielding
J_ČLÁNEK
Date
2024Author
Zheng, Liting
Barry, Kathryn E.
Guerrero-Ramírez, Nathaly R.
Craven, Dylan
Reich, Petr B.
Verheyen, Kris
Scherer-Lorenzen, Michael
Eisenhauer, Nico
Barsoum, Nadia
Bauhus, Jürgen
Bruelheide, Helge
Cavender-Bares, Jeannine
Dolezal, Jiri
Auge, Harald
Fagundes, Marina V.
Ferlian, Olga
Fiedler, Sebastian
Forrester, David I.
Ganade, Gislene
Gebauer, Tobias
Haase, Josephine
Hajek, Peter
Hector, Andy
Hérault, Bruno
Hölscher, Dirk
Hulvey, Kristin B.
Irawan, Bambang
Jactel, Hervé
Koricheva, Julia
Kreft, Holger
Lanta, Vojtech
Leps, Jan
Mereu, Simone
Messier, Christian
Montagnini, Florencia
Rewald, Boris
Godbold, Douglas Lawrence
Yan, Enrong
Hautier, Yann
+ 33 Authors
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Plant diversity effects on community productivity often increase over time. Whether the strengthening of diversity effects is caused by temporal shifts in species-level overyielding (i.e., higher species-level productivity in diverse communities compared with monocultures) remains unclear. Here, using data from 65 grassland and forest biodiversity experiments, we show that the temporal strength of diversity effects at the community scale is underpinned by temporal changes in the species that yield. These temporal trends of species-level overyielding are shaped by plant ecological strategies, which can be quantitatively delimited by functional traits. In grasslands, the temporal strengthening of biodiversity effects on community productivity was associated with increasing biomass overyielding of resource-conservative species increasing over time, and with overyielding of species characterized by fast resource acquisition either decreasing or increasing. In forests, temporal trends in species overyielding differ when considering above- versus belowground resource acquisition strategies. Overyielding in stem growth decreased for species with high light capture capacity but increased for those with high soil resource acquisition capacity. Our results imply that a diversity of species with different, and potentially complementary, ecological strategies is beneficial for maintaining community productivity over time in both grassland and forest ecosystems.