Synchrony matters more than species richness in plant community stability at a global scale
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Published:2020-09-08
Issue:39
Volume:117
Page:24345-24351
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ISSN:0027-8424
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Container-title:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
Author:
Valencia EnriqueORCID, de Bello FrancescoORCID, Galland ThomasORCID, Adler Peter B.ORCID, Lepš JanORCID, E-Vojtkó Anna, van Klink RoelORCID, Carmona Carlos P.ORCID, Danihelka JiříORCID, Dengler JürgenORCID, Eldridge David J.ORCID, Estiarte MarcORCID, García-González RicardoORCID, Garnier EricORCID, Gómez‐García Daniel, Harrison Susan P.ORCID, Herben Tomáš, Ibáñez RicardoORCID, Jentsch AnkeORCID, Juergens NorbertORCID, Kertész Miklós, Klumpp Katja, Louault FrédériqueORCID, Marrs Rob H.ORCID, Ogaya RomàORCID, Ónodi GáborORCID, Pakeman Robin J.ORCID, Pardo IkerORCID, Pärtel MeelisORCID, Peco BegoñaORCID, Peñuelas JosepORCID, Pywell Richard F., Rueda MartaORCID, Schmidt Wolfgang, Schmiedel UteORCID, Schuetz Martin, Skálová HanaORCID, Šmilauer PetrORCID, Šmilauerová MarieORCID, Smit Christian, Song MingHuaORCID, Stock MartinORCID, Val JamesORCID, Vandvik VigdisORCID, Ward DavidORCID, Wesche KarstenORCID, Wiser Susan K.ORCID, Woodcock Ben A., Young Truman P.ORCID, Yu Fei-HaiORCID, Zobel MartinORCID, Götzenberger LarsORCID
Abstract
The stability of ecological communities is critical for the stable provisioning of ecosystem services, such as food and forage production, carbon sequestration, and soil fertility. Greater biodiversity is expected to enhance stability across years by decreasing synchrony among species, but the drivers of stability in nature remain poorly resolved. Our analysis of time series from 79 datasets across the world showed that stability was associated more strongly with the degree of synchrony among dominant species than with species richness. The relatively weak influence of species richness is consistent with theory predicting that the effect of richness on stability weakens when synchrony is higher than expected under random fluctuations, which was the case in most communities. Land management, nutrient addition, and climate change treatments had relatively weak and varying effects on stability, modifying how species richness, synchrony, and stability interact. Our results demonstrate the prevalence of biotic drivers on ecosystem stability, with the potential for environmental drivers to alter the intricate relationship among richness, synchrony, and stability.
Funder
Consejería de Educación e Investigación, Comunidad de Madrid Czech Science Foundation Czech Academy of Sciences
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Subject
Multidisciplinary
Cited by
131 articles.
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