Animal and plant space-use drive plant diversity-productivity relationships

Ecol Lett. 2023 Oct;26(10):1792-1802. doi: 10.1111/ele.14295. Epub 2023 Aug 8.

Abstract

Plant community productivity generally increases with biodiversity, but the strength of this relationship exhibits strong empirical variation. In meta-food-web simulations, we addressed if the spatial overlap in plants' resource access and animal space-use can explain such variability. We found that spatial overlap of plant resource access is a prerequisite for positive diversity-productivity relationships, but causes exploitative competition that can lead to competitive exclusion. Space-use of herbivores causes apparent competition among plants, resulting in negative relationships. However, space-use of larger top predators integrates sub-food webs composed of smaller species, offsetting the negative effects of exploitative and apparent competition and leading to strongly positive diversity-productivity relationships. Overall, our results show that spatial overlap of plants' resource access and animal space-use can greatly alter the strength and sign of such relationships. In particular, the scaling of animal space-use effects opens new perspectives for linking landscape processes without effects on biodiversity to productivity patterns.

Keywords: biodiversity-ecosystem functioning; coexistence; complementarity; complex food webs; foraging range; home range; multi-trophic interactions; primary production.

Publication types

  • Letter

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biodiversity*
  • Biomass
  • Ecosystem*
  • Food Chain
  • Herbivory
  • Plants