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Forest productivity increases with evenness, species richness and trait variation: a global meta‐analysis

TLDR
This analysis is the first to demonstrate the critical role of species evenness, richness and the importance of contrasting traits in defining net diversity effects in forest polycultures and should motivate future studies to link richness,Evenness, contrasting traits and life-history stage to the mechanisms that are expected to produce positive net biodiversity effects.
Abstract
Summary 1. Although there is ample support for positive species richness–productivity relationships in planted grassland experiments, a recent 48-site study found no diversity–productivity relationship (DPR) in herbaceous communities. Thus, debate persists about diversity effects in natural versus planted systems. Additionally, current knowledge is weak regarding the influence of evenness on the DPRs, how DPRs are affected by the variation in life-history traits among constituent species in polycultures and how DPRs differ among biomes. The impacts of these factors on DPRs in forest ecosystems are even more poorly understood. 2. We performed a meta-analysis of 54 studies to reconcile DPRs in forest ecosystems. We quantified the net diversity effect as log effect size [ln(ES)], the log ratio of the productivity in polycultures to the average of those in monocultures within the same type of mixture, site condition and stand age of each study. The first use of a boosted regression tree model in meta-analysis, a useful method to partition the effects of multiple predictors rather than relying on vote-counting of individual studies, unveiled the relative influences of individual predictors. 3. Global average ln(ES) was 0.2128, indicating 23.7% higher productivity in polycultures than monocultures. The final model explained 21% of the variation in ln(ES). The predictors that substantially accounted for the explained variation included evenness (34%), heterogeneity of shade tolerance (29%), richness (13%) and stand age (15%). In contrast, heterogeneity of nitrogen fixation and growth habits, biome and stand origin (naturally established versus planted) contributed negligibly (each £ 4%). Log effect size strongly increased with evenness from 0.6 to 1 and with richness from 2 to 6. Furthermore, it was higher with heterogeneity of shade tolerance and generally increased with stand age. 4. Synthesis. Our analysis is, to our knowledge, the first to demonstrate the critical role of species evenness, richness and the importance of contrasting traits in defining net diversity effects in forest polycultures. While testing the specific mechanisms is beyond the scope of our analysis, our results should motivate future studies to link richness, evenness, contrasting traits and life-history stage to the mechanisms that are expected to produce positive net biodiversity effects such as niche differentiation, facilitation and reduced Janzen–Connell effects.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Positive biodiversity-productivity relationship predominant in global forests

Jingjing Liang, +92 more
- 14 Oct 2016 - 
TL;DR: A consistent positive concave-down effect of biodiversity on forest productivity across the world is revealed, showing that a continued biodiversity loss would result in an accelerating decline in forest productivity worldwide.
Journal ArticleDOI

Increasing homogeneity in global food supplies and the implications for food security

TL;DR: Significance This study provides evidence of change in the relative importance of different crop plants in national food supplies worldwide over the past 50 years, which heightens interdependence among countries in their food supplies, plant genetic resources, and nutritional priorities, and gives further urgency to nutrition development priorities aimed at bolstering food security.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sequencing ancient calcified dental plaque shows changes in oral microbiota with dietary shifts of the Neolithic and Industrial revolutions

TL;DR: It is shown that calcified dental plaque on ancient teeth preserves a detailed genetic record throughout this period of transition between Neolithic and medieval times, after which (the now ubiquitous) cariogenic bacteria became dominant, apparently during the Industrial Revolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Response diversity determines the resilience of ecosystems to environmental change.

TL;DR: A conceptual model is provided to describe how loss of response diversity may cause ecosystem degradation through decreased ecosystem resilience, and how response diversity contributes to functional compensation and to spatio‐temporal complementarity among species, leading to long‐term maintenance of ecosystem multifunctionality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Resistance of European tree species to drought stress in mixed versus pure forests: evidence of stress release by inter-specific facilitation.

TL;DR: It is revealed that tree resistance and resilience to drought stress can be modified distinctly through species mixing and the far-reaching implications that these differences in stress response under intra- and inter-specific environments have for forest ecosystem dynamics and management under climate change are discussed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A working guide to boosted regression trees

TL;DR: This study provides a working guide to boosted regression trees (BRT), an ensemble method for fitting statistical models that differs fundamentally from conventional techniques that aim to fit a single parsimonious model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Herbivores and the Number of Tree Species in Tropical Forests

TL;DR: Any event that increases the efficiency of the predators at eating seeds and seedlings of a given tree species may lead to a reduction in population density of the adults of that species and/or to increased distance between new adults and their parents.
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