Linking changes in species composition and biomass in a globally distributed grassland experiment

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Authors

Ladouceur, Emma
Blowes, Shane A.
Chase, Jonathan M.
Clark, Adam T.
Garbowski, Magda
Alberti, Juan
Arnillas, Carlos Alberto
Bakker, Jonathan D.
Barrio, Isabel C.
Bharath, Siddharth

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

Abstract

Global change drivers, such as anthropogenic nutrient inputs, are increasing globally. Nutrient deposition simultaneously alters plant biodiversity, species composition and ecosystem processes like aboveground biomass production. These changes are underpinned by species extinction, colonisation and shifting relative abundance. Here, we use the Price equation to quantify and link the contributions of species that are lost, gained or that persist to change in aboveground biomass in 59 experimental grassland sites. Under ambient (control) conditions, compositional and biomass turnover was high, and losses (i.e. local extinctions) were balanced by gains (i.e. colonisation). Under fertilisation, the decline in species richness resulted from increased species loss and decreases in species gained. Biomass increase under fertilisation resulted mostly from species that persist and to a lesser extent from species gained. Drivers of ecological change can interact relatively independently with diversity, composition and ecosystem processes and functions such as aboveground biomass due to the individual contributions of species lost, gained or persisting.

Description

DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT : Data are publicly available on the Environmental Data Initiative (EDI) (https://doi.org/10.6073/pasta/293faff7ed2e287b56e85796c87c3e4b). Code to produce results is freely available on GitHub (https://github.com/emma-ladouceur/NutNet-CAFE) and archived through Zenodo (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7108504). Some data associated with the Nutrient Network are already open access (https://nutnet.org/index.php/datadois), but this data set used here is unique in the number of sites, the temporal grain and the metrics used.

Keywords

Aboveground biomass (AGB), Biodiversity change, CAFE approach, Ecosystem functioning, Global change, Grasslands, Nutrient deposition, Price equation, Nutrient network, Turnover

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Citation

Ladouceur, E., Blowes, S.A., Chase, J.M., Clark, A.T., Garbowski, M. & Alberti, J. et al. (2022) Linking changes in species composition and biomass in a globally distributed grassland experiment. Ecology Letters, 25, 2699–2712. Available from: https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.14126.