Grassland intensification effects cascade to alter multifunctionality of wetlands within metaecosystems

Author:

Guo Yuxi,Boughton Elizabeth H.,Bohlman Stephanie,Bernacchi CarlORCID,Bohlen Patrick J.ORCID,Boughton RaoulORCID,DeLucia Evan,Fauth John E.,Gomez-Casanovas Nuria,Jenkins David G.,Lollis Gene,Miller Ryan S.,Quintana-Ascencio Pedro F.,Sonnier Grégory,Sparks JedORCID,Swain Hilary M.ORCID,Qiu JiangxiaoORCID

Abstract

AbstractSustainable agricultural intensification could improve ecosystem service multifunctionality, yet empirical evidence remains tenuous, especially regarding consequences for spatially coupled ecosystems connected by flows across ecosystem boundaries (i.e., metaecosystems). Here we aim to understand the effects of land-use intensification on multiple ecosystem services of spatially connected grasslands and wetlands, where management practices were applied to grasslands but not directly imposed to wetlands. We synthesize long-term datasets encompassing 53 physical, chemical, and biological indicators, comprising >11,000 field measurements. Our results reveal that intensification promotes high-quality forage and livestock production in both grasslands and wetlands, but at the expense of water quality regulation, methane mitigation, non-native species invasion resistance, and biodiversity. Land-use intensification weakens relationships among ecosystem services. The effects on grasslands cascade to alter multifunctionality of embedded natural wetlands within the metaecosystems to a similar extent. These results highlight the importance of considering spatial flows of resources and organisms when studying land-use intensification effects on metaecosystems as well as when designing grassland and wetland management practices to improve landscape multifunctionality.

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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