Abstract
SummaryTargeted removal experiments are a powerful tool to assess the effects of plant species or (functional) groups on ecosystem functions. However, removing plant biomass in itself can bias the observed responses. This bias is commonly addressed by waiting until ecosystem recovery, but this is inherently based on unverified proxies or anecdotal evidence. Statistical control methods are efficient, but restricted in scope by underlying assumptions.We propose accounting for such biases within the experimental design, using a gradient of biomass removal controls. We demonstrate the relevance of this design by presenting i) conceptual examples of suspected biases and ii) how to observe and control for these biases.Using data from a mycorrhizal association-based removal experiment we show that ignoring biomass removal biases (including by assuming ecosystem recovery) can lead to incorrect, or even contrary conclusions (e.g., false positive and false negative). Our gradient design can prevent such incorrect interpretations, whether aboveground biomass has fully recovered or not.Our approach provides more objective and quantitative insights, independently assessed for each variable, than using a proxy to assume ecosystem recovery. Our approach circumvents the strict statistical assumptions of e.g. ANCOVA and thus offers greater flexibility in data analysis.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference37 articles.
1. Neighbour manipulations in natural vegetation a review;Journal of Vegetation Science,1990
2. Abisko Scientific Research Station. 2023. Meteorological data mean daily air temperature 1990-2021, Abisko Observatory, Swedish Polar Research Secretariat. [WWW document] https://www.polar.se/en/research-support/open-data-and-publications/data-from-abisko-scientific-research-station/ [accessed 31 January 2023]
3. A rediscovered treasure: mycorrhizal intensity database for 3000 vascular plant species across the former Soviet Union;Ecology,2012
4. Fitting Linear Mixed-Effects Models Using lme4;Journal of Statistical Software,2015
5. The hidden season: growing season is 50% longer below than above ground along an arctic elevation gradient