Increasing plant species richness by seeding has marginal effects on ecosystem functioning in agricultural grasslands

Author:

Freitag Martin1ORCID,Hölzel Norbert1ORCID,Neuenkamp Lena1ORCID,van der Plas Fons2,Manning Peter34ORCID,Abrahão Anna5ORCID,Bergmann Joana6,Boeddinghaus Runa5ORCID,Bolliger Ralph7,Hamer Ute8,Kandeler Ellen5,Kleinebecker Till910ORCID,Knorr Klaus‐Holger11,Marhan Sven5,Neyret Margot3ORCID,Prati Daniel7,Le Provost Gaëtane3,Saiz Hugo7,van Kleunen Mark1213,Schäfer Deborah14ORCID,Klaus Valentin H.1516ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research Group, Institute of Landscape Ecology University of Münster Münster Germany

2. Plant Ecology and Nature Conservation Group Wageningen University & Research Wageningen The Netherlands

3. Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre (SBIK‐F), Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung Frankfurt Germany

4. Department of Biological Sciences University of Bergen Bergen Norway

5. Institute of Soil Science and Land Evaluation, University of Hohenheim Stuttgart Germany

6. Sustainable Grassland Systems, Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF) Paulinenaue Germany

7. Institute of Plant Sciences University of Bern Bern Switzerland

8. Soil Ecology and Land Use Institute of Landscape Ecology, University of Münster Münster Germany

9. Institute of Landscape Ecology and Resource Management, Justus Liebig University Giessen Giessen Germany

10. Centre for International Development and Environmental Research (ZEU) Justus Liebig University Giessen Giessen Germany

11. Ecohydrology and Biogeochemistry Institute of Landscape Ecology, University of Münster Münster Germany

12. Ecology, Department of Biology University of Konstanz Konstanz Germany

13. Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Plant Evolutionary Ecology and Conservation Taizhou University Taizhou China

14. Botanical Garden of the University of Bern, University of Bern Bern Switzerland

15. Institute of Agricultural Sciences, ETH Zürich Zürich Switzerland

16. Forage Production and Grassland Systems, Agroscope Zürich Switzerland

Abstract

Abstract Experimental evidence shows that grassland plant diversity enhances ecosystem functioning. Yet, the transfer of results from controlled biodiversity experiments to naturally assembled ‘real world’ ecosystems remains challenging due to environmental variation among sites, confounding biodiversity ecosystem functioning relations in observational studies. To bridge the gap between classical biodiversity‐ecosystem functioning experiments and observational studies of naturally assembled and managed ecosystems, we created regionally replicated, within‐site gradients of species richness by seeding across agricultural grasslands differing in land‐use intensity (LUI) and abiotic site conditions. Within each of 73 grassland sites, we established a full‐factorial experiment with high‐diversity seeding and topsoil disturbance and measured 12 ecosystem functions related to productivity, and carbon and nutrient cycling after 4 years. We then analysed the effects of plant diversity (seeded richness as well as realized richness), functional community composition, land use and abiotic conditions on the ecosystem functions within (local scale) as well as among grassland sites (landscape scale). Despite the successful creation of a within‐site gradient in plant diversity (average increase in species richness in seeding treatments by 10%–35%), we found that only one to two of the 12 ecosystem functions responded to realized species richness, resulting in more closed nitrogen cycles in more diverse plant communities. Similar results were found when analysing the effect of the seeding treatment instead of realized species richness. Among sites, ecosystem functioning was mostly driven by environmental conditions and LUI. Also here, the only functions related to plant species richness were those associated with a more closed nitrogen cycle under increased diversity. The minor effects of species enrichment we found suggest that the functionally‐relevant niche space is largely saturated in naturally assembled grasslands, and that competitive, high‐functioning species are already present. Synthesis: While nature conservation and cultural ecosystem services can certainly benefit from plant species enrichment, our study indicates that restoration of plant diversity in naturally assembled communities may deliver only relatively weak increases in ecosystem functioning, such as a more closed nitrogen cycle, within the extensively to moderate intensively managed agricultural grasslands of our study.

Funder

Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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