Cardinale Bradley J, Hillebrand Helmut, Harpole W S, Gross Kevin, Ptacnik Robert
Department of Ecology, Evolution & Marine Biology, University of California-Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, USA.
Ecol Lett. 2009 Jun;12(6):475-87. doi: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2009.01317.x.
One of the oldest and richest questions in biology is that of how species diversity is related to the availability of resources that limit the productivity of ecosystems. Researchers from a variety of disciplines have pursued this question from at least three different theoretical perspectives. Species energy theory has argued that the summed quantities of all resources influence species richness by controlling population sizes and the probability of stochastic extinction. Resource ratio theory has argued that the imbalance in the supply of two or more resources, relative to the stoichiometric needs of the competitors, can dictate the strength of competition and, in turn, the diversity of coexisting species. In contrast to these, the field of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Functioning has argued that species diversity acts as an independent variable that controls how efficiently limited resources are utilized and converted into new tissue. Here we propose that all three of these fields give necessary, but not sufficient, conditions to explain productivity-diversity relationships (PDR) in nature. However, when taken collectively, these three paradigms suggest that PDR can be explained by interactions among four distinct, non-interchangeable variables: (i) the overall quantity of limiting resources, (ii) the stoichiometric ratios of different limiting resources, (iii) the summed biomass produced by a group of potential competitors and (iv) the richness of co-occurring species in a local competitive community. We detail a new multivariate hypothesis that outlines one way in which these four variables are directly and indirectly related to one another. We show how the predictions of this model can be fit to patterns of covariation relating the richness and biomass of lake phytoplankton to three biologically essential resources (N, P and light) in a large number of Norwegian lakes.
生物学中最古老且最丰富的问题之一是物种多样性如何与限制生态系统生产力的资源可利用性相关。来自不同学科的研究人员至少从三种不同的理论视角探讨了这个问题。物种能量理论认为,所有资源的总量通过控制种群规模和随机灭绝的概率来影响物种丰富度。资源比率理论认为,两种或更多资源的供应失衡,相对于竞争者的化学计量需求而言,能够决定竞争的强度,进而决定共存物种的多样性。与之不同的是,生物多样性与生态系统功能领域认为物种多样性作为一个自变量,控制着有限资源被利用和转化为新组织的效率。在此我们提出,这三个领域都给出了解释自然界生产力 - 多样性关系(PDR)的必要但非充分条件。然而,当将这三种范式放在一起考虑时,它们表明PDR可以通过四个不同且不可互换的变量之间的相互作用来解释:(i)限制资源的总量,(ii)不同限制资源的化学计量比率,(iii)一组潜在竞争者产生的总生物量,以及(iv)局部竞争群落中共存物种的丰富度。我们详细阐述了一个新的多变量假说,概述了这四个变量相互之间直接和间接关联的一种方式。我们展示了该模型的预测如何能够拟合大量挪威湖泊中湖泊浮游植物丰富度和生物量与三种生物必需资源(氮、磷和光)之间的协变模式。