Water addition but not reduction alters plant biomass–diversity relationship

Author:

Yu Yan1,Peñuelas Josep23ORCID,Sardans Jordi23ORCID,Pei Jiu‐ying1,Li Ge1,Liu Guo‐lin1,Ye Jian‐Sheng1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Herbage Improvement and Grassland Agro‐ecosystems College of Ecology, Lanzhou University Lanzhou China

2. CSIC, Global Ecology Unit CREAF‐CSIC‐UAB Barcelona Catalonia Spain

3. CREAF Barcelona Catalonia Spain

Abstract

AbstractThe relationship between plant aboveground biomass and diversity typically follows a unimodal pattern, showing a positive correlation in resource‐poor habitats and a negative correlation in resource‐rich environments. Precipitation is a crucial resource for both plant biomass and diversity in terrestrial ecosystems. However, the impact of precipitation changes on the relationship between plant biomass and diversity remains unclear. We conduct a water addition field experiment in a semiarid grassland and identify a unimodal relationship between plant biomass and species richness under ambient conditions. Water addition delays the declining phase of this unimodal curve and shift it upward compared to ambient conditions. Our meta‐analysis of water addition experiments conducted across major biomes worldwide (grassland, shrubland, desert, and forest) supports this finding, while water reduction does not alter the biomass–diversity relationship. Water addition increases biomass in all climate but only increases species richness in arid and semiarid climate. Similarly, water reduction decreases biomass in all climate but only reduces species richness in arid and semiarid climate. Species richness in dry subhumid and humid climate does not change significantly. Furthermore, our field experiment shows that water addition increases plant diversity while decreasing soil inorganic nitrogen levels. The increase in one resource, such as water, leads to the scarcity of another, such as nutrient, thus postponing the declining phase of the plant biomass–diversity relationship typically observed in resource‐rich habitats. Our research contributes to predicting the plant biomass–diversity relationship under changing precipitation conditions and highlights the complex interplay between water availability, nutrient level, and plant diversity.

Funder

Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación

Fundación Ramón Areces

Publisher

Wiley

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