Causal networks of phytoplankton diversity and biomass are modulated by environmental context

Author:

Chang Chun-WeiORCID,Miki TakeshiORCID,Ye HaoORCID,Souissi SamiORCID,Adrian Rita,Anneville Orlane,Agasild Helen,Ban SyuheiORCID,Be’eri-Shlevin Yaron,Chiang Yin-Ru,Feuchtmayr HeidrunORCID,Gal GideonORCID,Ichise Satoshi,Kagami MaikoORCID,Kumagai MichioORCID,Liu XinORCID,Matsuzaki Shin-Ichiro S.,Manca Marina M.ORCID,Nõges PeeterORCID,Piscia RobertaORCID,Rogora Michela,Shiah Fuh-Kwo,Thackeray Stephen J.ORCID,Widdicombe Claire E.,Wu Jiunn-Tzong,Zohary Tamar,Hsieh Chih-haoORCID

Abstract

AbstractUntangling causal links and feedbacks among biodiversity, ecosystem functioning, and environmental factors is challenging due to their complex and context-dependent interactions (e.g., a nutrient-dependent relationship between diversity and biomass). Consequently, studies that only consider separable, unidirectional effects can produce divergent conclusions and equivocal ecological implications. To address this complexity, we use empirical dynamic modeling to assemble causal networks for 19 natural aquatic ecosystems (N24~N58) and quantified strengths of feedbacks among phytoplankton diversity, phytoplankton biomass, and environmental factors. Through a cross-system comparison, we identify macroecological patterns; in more diverse, oligotrophic ecosystems, biodiversity effects are more important than environmental effects (nutrients and temperature) as drivers of biomass. Furthermore, feedback strengths vary with productivity. In warm, productive systems, strong nitrate-mediated feedbacks usually prevail, whereas there are strong, phosphate-mediated feedbacks in cold, less productive systems. Our findings, based on recovered feedbacks, highlight the importance of a network view in future ecosystem management.

Funder

NCTS | Mathematics Division, National Center for Theoretical Sciences

Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan

National Taiwan University

Foundation for the Advancement of Outstanding Scholarship

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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