Clarifying the effect of biodiversity on productivity in natural ecosystems with longitudinal data and methods for causal inference

Author:

Dee Laura E.ORCID,Ferraro Paul J.ORCID,Severen Christopher N.,Kimmel Kaitlin A.,Borer Elizabeth T.ORCID,Byrnes Jarrett E. K.ORCID,Clark Adam Thomas,Hautier YannORCID,Hector AndrewORCID,Raynaud Xavier,Reich Peter B.ORCID,Wright Alexandra J.ORCID,Arnillas Carlos A.,Davies Kendi F.,MacDougall Andrew,Mori Akira S.ORCID,Smith Melinda D.ORCID,Adler Peter B.ORCID,Bakker Jonathan D.ORCID,Brauman Kate A.ORCID,Cowles JaneORCID,Komatsu KimberlyORCID,Knops Johannes M. H.,McCulley Rebecca L.ORCID,Moore Joslin L.ORCID,Morgan John W.,Ohlert Timothy,Power Sally A.ORCID,Sullivan Lauren L.,Stevens CarlyORCID,Loreau Michel

Abstract

AbstractCausal effects of biodiversity on ecosystem functions can be estimated using experimental or observational designs — designs that pose a tradeoff between drawing credible causal inferences from correlations and drawing generalizable inferences. Here, we develop a design that reduces this tradeoff and revisits the question of how plant species diversity affects productivity. Our design leverages longitudinal data from 43 grasslands in 11 countries and approaches borrowed from fields outside of ecology to draw causal inferences from observational data. Contrary to many prior studies, we estimate that increases in plot-level species richness caused productivity to decline: a 10% increase in richness decreased productivity by 2.4%, 95% CI [−4.1, −0.74]. This contradiction stems from two sources. First, prior observational studies incompletely control for confounding factors. Second, most experiments plant fewer rare and non-native species than exist in nature. Although increases in native, dominant species increased productivity, increases in rare and non-native species decreased productivity, making the average effect negative in our study. By reducing the tradeoff between experimental and observational designs, our study demonstrates how observational studies can complement prior ecological experiments and inform future ones.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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