Functional identity of leaf dry matter content regulates community stability in the northern Tibetan grasslands

Sci Total Environ. 2022 Sep 10;838(Pt 2):156150. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.156150. Epub 2022 May 22.

Abstract

Biodiversity-stability mechanisms have been the focus of many long-term community stability studies. Community functional composition (i.e., functional diversity and functional identity of community plant functional traits) is critical for community stability; however, this topic has received less attention in large-scale studies. Here, we combined a field survey of biodiversity and plant functional traits in 22 alpine grassland sites throughout the northern Tibetan Plateau with 20 years of satellite-sensed proxy data (enhanced vegetation index) of community productivity to identify the factors influencing community stability. Our results showed that functional composition influenced community stability the most, explaining 61.71% of the variation in community stability (of which functional diversity explained 18.56% and functional identity explained 43.15%), which was a higher contribution than that of biodiversity (Berger-Parker index and species evenness; 35.04%). Structural equation modeling suggested that functional identity strongly affected community stability, whereas biodiversity had a minor impact. Furthermore, functional identity of leaf dry matter content regulated community stability by enhancing species dominance (Berger-Parker index). Our findings demonstrate that functional composition, specifically functional identity, plays a key role in community stability, highlighting the importance of functional identity in understanding and revealing the stabilizing mechanisms in these fragile alpine ecosystems which are subjected to increasing environmental fluctuations.

Keywords: Alpine grasslands; Biodiversity; Community stability; Functional diversity; Functional identity; Leaf dry matter content.

MeSH terms

  • Biodiversity
  • Ecosystem*
  • Grassland*
  • Plant Leaves
  • Plants
  • Tibet