Dybzinski Ray, Fargione Joseph E, Zak Donald R, Fornara Dario, Tilman David
Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior, University of Minnesota, St Paul, MN, 55108, USA.
Oecologia. 2008 Nov;158(1):85-93. doi: 10.1007/s00442-008-1123-x. Epub 2008 Aug 9.
Most explanations for the positive effect of plant species diversity on productivity have focused on the efficiency of resource use, implicitly assuming that resource supply is constant. To test this assumption, we grew seedlings of Echinacea purpurea in soil collected beneath 10-year-old, experimental plant communities containing one, two, four, eight, or 16 native grassland species. The results of this greenhouse bioassay challenge the assumption of constant resource supply; we found that bioassay seedlings grown in soil collected from experimental communities containing 16 plant species produced 70% more biomass than seedlings grown in soil collected beneath monocultures. This increase was likely attributable to greater soil N availability, which had increased in higher diversity communities over the 10-year-duration of the experiment. In a distinction akin to the selection/complementarity partition commonly made in studies of diversity and productivity, we further determined whether the additive effects of functional groups or the interactive effects of functional groups explained the increase in fertility with diversity. The increase in bioassay seedling biomass with diversity was largely explained by a concomitant increase in N-fixer, C4 grass, forb, and C3 grass biomass with diversity, suggesting that the additive effects of these four functional groups at higher diversity contributed to enhance N availability and retention. Nevertheless, diversity still explained a significant amount of the residual variation in bioassay seedling biomass after functional group biomass was included in a multiple regression, suggesting that interactions also increased fertility in diverse communities. Our results suggest a mechanism, the fertility effect, by which increased plant species diversity may increase community productivity over time by increasing the supply of nutrients via both greater inputs and greater retention.
对于植物物种多样性对生产力产生积极影响的大多数解释都集中在资源利用效率上,暗中假定资源供应是恒定的。为了检验这一假设,我们在从有1年、2年、4年、8年或16年本土草地物种的10年实验植物群落下方采集的土壤中培育紫锥菊幼苗。这个温室生物测定的结果对资源供应恒定的假设提出了挑战;我们发现,在从包含16种植物物种的实验群落采集的土壤中生长的生物测定幼苗产生的生物量比在单一栽培群落下方采集的土壤中生长的幼苗多70%。这种增加可能归因于土壤中更高的氮有效性,在为期10年的实验中,更高多样性群落中的氮有效性有所增加。类似于在多样性和生产力研究中通常进行的选择/互补性划分,我们进一步确定是功能组的加性效应还是功能组的交互效应解释了随着多样性增加而带来的肥力增加。生物测定幼苗生物量随多样性的增加在很大程度上是由固氮植物、C4禾本科植物、杂类草和C3禾本科植物生物量随多样性的相应增加所解释的,这表明这四个功能组在更高多样性下的加性效应有助于提高氮的有效性和保持能力。然而,在多元回归中纳入功能组生物量后,多样性仍然解释了生物测定幼苗生物量中大量的剩余变异,这表明交互作用也增加了多样群落中的肥力。我们的结果提出了一种机制,即肥力效应,通过这种机制,随着时间的推移,增加的植物物种多样性可能通过增加养分输入和保持能力来增加群落生产力。