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Evenness mediates the global relationship between forest productivity and richness

Authors :
Hordijk, Iris
Maynard, Daniel S.
Hart, Simon P.
Lidong, Mo
Ter Steege, Hans
Liang, Jingjing
de-Miguel, Sergio
Nabuurs, Gert-Jan
Reich, Peter B.
Abegg, Meinrad
Adou Yao, Yves C.
Alberti, Giorgio
Almeyda Zambrano, Angélica María
Alvarado, Braulio V.
Álvarez-Dávila, Esteban
Alvarez-Loayza, Patricia
Alves, Luciana F.
Ammer, Christian
Antón-Fernández, Clara
Araujo-Murakami, Alejandro
Arroyo, Luzmila
Avitabile, Valerio
Aymard C., Gerardo A.
Baker, Timothy R.
Balazy, Radomir
Banki, Olaf
Barroso, Jorcely
Bastian, Meredith
Bastin, Jean-François
Birigazzi, Luca
Birnbaum, Philippe
Bitariho, Robert
Boeckx, Pascal
Bongers, Frans
Bouriaud, Olivier
Brancalion, Pedro H.S.
Brandl, Susanne
Brienen, Roel
Broadbent, Eben North
Bruelheide, Helge
Bussotti, Filippo
Cazzolla Gatti, Roberto
César, Ricardo G.
Cesljar, Goran
Chazdon, Robin L.
Chen, Han Y. H.
Chisholm, Chelsea
Cienciala, Emil
Clark, Connie J.
Clark, David B.
Colletta, Gabriel
Coomes, David A.
Cornejo Valverde, Fernando
Corral-Rivas, José Javier
Crim, Philip
Cumming, Jonathan
Dayanandan, Selvadurai
De Gasper, André Luis
Decuyper, Mathieu
Derroire, Géraldine
DeVries, Ben
Djordjevic, Ilija
Iêda, Amaral
Dourdain, Aurélie
Engone Obiang, Nestor Laurier
Enquist, Brian
Eyre, Teresa J.
Belarmain Fandohan, Adandé
Fayle, Tom M.
Ferreira, Leandro
Feldpausch, Ted R.
Finér, Leena
Fischer, Markus
Fletcher, Christine D.
Frizzera, Lorenzo
Gamarra, Javier Garcia Perez
Gianelle, Damiano
Glick, Henry B.
Harris, David
Hector, Andrew
Hemp, Andreas
Hengeveld, Geerten M.
Herault, Bruno
Herbohn, John
Hillers, Annika
Honorio Coronado, Eurídice N.
Hui, Cang
Cho, Hyunkook
Ibanez, Thomas
Bin Jung, Il
Imai, Nobuo
Jagodzinski, Andrzej M.
Jaroszewicz, Bogdan
Johanssen, Vivian
Joly, Carlos Alfredo
Jucker, Tommaso
Karminov, Viktor
Kartawinata, Kuswata
Kearsley, Elizabeth
Kenfack, David
Kennard, Deborah K.
Kepfer-Rojas, Sebastian
Keppel, Gunnar
Latif Khan, Mohammed
Killeen, Timothy J.
Seok Kim, Hyun
Kitayama, Kanehiro
Köhl, Michael
Korjus, Henn
Kraxner, Florian
Laarmann, Diana
Lang, Mait
Lewis, Simon L.
Lu, Huicui
Lukina, Natalia
Maitner, Brian S.
Malhi, Yadvinder
Marcon, Eric
Marimon, Beatriz Schwantes
Marimon-Junior, Ben Hur
Marshall, Andrew Robert
Martin, Emanuel
Martynenko, Olga V.
Meave, Jorge A.
Melo-Cruz, Omar
Mendoza, Casimiro
Merow, Cory
Stanislaw, Miscicki
Monteagudo Mendoza, Abel
Moreno, Vanessa S.
Mukul, Sharif A.
Mundhenk, Philip
Nava-Miranda, Maria Guadalupe
Neill, David
Neldner, Victor J.
Nevenic, Radovan V.
Ngugi, Michael R.
Niklaus, Pascal A.
Oleksyn, Jacek
Ontikov, Petr V.
Ortiz-Malavasi, Edgar
Pan, Yude
Paquette, Alain
Parada-Gutierrez, Alexander
Parfenova, Elena I.
Park, Minjee
Parren, Marc
Parthasarathy, Narayanaswamy
Peri, Pablo Luis
Pfautsch, Sebastian
Phillips, Oliver L.
Picard, Nicolas
Piedade, Maria Teresa F.
Piotto, Daniel
Pitman, Nigel C. A.
Polo, Irina
Poorter, Lourens
Dalberg Poulsen, Axel
Poulsen, John R.
Pretzsch, Hans
Ramirez Arevalo, Freddy
Restrepo-Correa, Zorayda
Rodeghiero, Mirco
Rolim, Samir
Roopsind, Anand
Rovero, Francesco
Rutishauser, Ervan
Saikia, Purabi
Salas-Eljatib, Christian
Schall, Peter
Schepaschenko, Dmitry
Scherer-Lorenzen, Michael
Schmid, Bernhard
Schöngart, Jochen
Searle, Eric B.
Seben, Vladimir
Serra-Diaz, Josep M.
Sheil, Douglas
Shvidenko, Anatoly Z.
Silva-Espejo, Javier
Silveira, Marcos
Singh, James
Sist, Plinio
Source :
Journal of Ecology
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Biodiversity is an important component of natural ecosystems, with higher species richness often correlating with an increase in ecosystem productivity. Yet, this relationship varies substantially across environments, typically becoming less pronounced at high levels of species richness. However, species richness alone cannot reflect all important properties of a community, including community evenness, which may mediate the relationship between biodiversity and productivity. If the evenness of a community correlates negatively with richness across forests globally, then a greater number of species may not always increase overall diversity and productivity of the system. Theoretical work and local empirical studies have shown that the effect of evenness on ecosystem functioning may be especially strong at high richness levels, yet the consistency of this remains untested at a global scale. 2. Here, we used a dataset of forests from across the globe, which includes composition, biomass accumulation and net primary productivity, to explore whether productivity correlates with community evenness and richness in a way that evenness appears to buffer the effect of richness. Specifically, we evaluated whether low levels of evenness in speciose communities correlate with the attenuation of the richness–productivity relationship. 3. We found that tree species richness and evenness are negatively correlated across forests globally, with highly speciose forests typically comprising a few dominant and many rare species. Furthermore, we found that the correlation between diversity and productivity changes with evenness: at low richness, uneven communities are more productive, while at high richness, even communities are more productive. 4. Synthesis. Collectively, these results demonstrate that evenness is an integral component of the relationship between biodiversity and productivity, and that the attenuating effect of richness on forest productivity might be partly explained by low evenness in speciose communities. Productivity generally increases with species richness, until reduced evenness limits the overall increases in community diversity. Our research suggests that evenness is a fundamental component of biodiversity–ecosystem function relationships, and is of critical importance for guiding conservation and sustainable ecosystem management decisions.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Ecology
Accession number :
edsair.od......3631..72bf3debe51915a01f02560feb4871a5