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Functional identity is more important than diversity in influencing ecosystem processes in a temperate native grassland

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TLDR
This study is one of the first explicit comparisons of the 'diversity' and 'mass ratio' hypotheses, and the results most strongly support the mass ratio hypothesis, that is, the traits of the dominant species most influenced the ecosystem properties and processes examined.
Abstract
1. Experimental studies have provided significant knowledge of how biodiversity can influence ecosystem processes. However, there is a growing need to relate these findings to natural communities. 2. Here we identify two major hypotheses for how communities may influence ecosystem processes: the 'diversity hypothesis' (the diversity of organisms in a community influences ecosystem processes through mechanisms such as complementary resource use), and the 'mass ratio hypothesis' (ecosystem processes are determined overwhelmingly by the functional traits of the dominant species). We then test which of these two hypotheses best explain variation in ecosystem properties and processes (biomass pools and fluxes, water use, light interception) in a temperate native grassland. We do this by applying various measures of diversity, functional diversity, and functional identity, whose significant relations with ecosystem processes would support either of the competing hypotheses. 3. Mean trait values best explained variation in five of the eight ecosystem processes examined, supporting Grime's mass ratio hypothesis, which proposes that the functional identities of the dominant species largely determine ecosystem processes. 4. Multi-trait functional diversity indices also explained large amounts of variation in ecosystem processes, while only weak relationships were observed between species richness and ecosystem processes. 5. To explore the mechanistic interactions between variables, we developed structural equation models (SEMs), which indicated that many of the community diversity and trait properties significantly influenced ecosystem processes, even after accounting for co-varying biotic/abiotic factors. 6. Synthesis. Our study is one of the first explicit comparisons of the 'diversity' and 'mass ratio' hypotheses, and our results most strongly support the mass ratio hypothesis, that is, the traits of the dominant species most influenced the ecosystem properties and processes examined. Our results suggest that the management of communities for the maintenance of ecosystem processes should focus on species dominance hierarchies.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A distance-based framework for measuring functional diversity from multiple traits

TL;DR: A highly flexible distance-based framework to measure different facets of FD in multidimensional trait space from any distance or dissimilarity measure, any number of traits, and from different trait types (i.e., quantitative, semi-quantitative, and qualitative).
Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond species: functional diversity and the maintenance of ecological processes and services

TL;DR: FD measures can explain variation in ecosystem function even when richness does not, and should be incorporated into conservation and restoration decision-making, especially for those efforts attempting to reconstruct or preserve healthy, functioning ecosystems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Loss of functional diversity under land use intensification across multiple taxa.

TL;DR: Analysis of changes in species richness and functional diversity at varying agricultural land use intensity levels in plant, bird, and mammal communities finds declines were steeper than predicted by species number and changes in FD were indistinguishable from changes inspecies richness.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of biodiversity on tree productivity: from temperate to boreal forests

TL;DR: In this article, a large-scale demonstration of a strong, positive and significant effect of biodiversity on tree productivity with control for climatic and environmental conditions was presented. But the authors did not consider the effects of complementarity on ecosystem functioning.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A General Coefficient of Similarity and Some of Its Properties

John C. Gower
- 01 Dec 1971 - 
TL;DR: A general coefficient measuring the similarity between two sampling units is defined and the matrix of similarities between all pairs of sample units is shown to be positive semidefinite.
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A handbook of protocols for standardised and easy measurement of plant functional traits worldwide

TL;DR: This paper provides an international methodological protocol aimed at standardising this research effort, based on consensus among a broad group of scientists in this field, and features a practical handbook with step-by-step recipes, for 28 functional traits recognised as critical for tackling large-scale ecological questions.
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Mycorrhizal fungal diversity determines plant biodiversity, ecosystem variability and productivity

TL;DR: It is shown that below-ground diversity of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) is a major factor contributing to the maintenance of plant biodiversity and to ecosystem functioning, and that microbial interactions can drive ecosystem functions such as plant biodiversity, productivity and variability.
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The Influence of Functional Diversity and Composition on Ecosystem Processes

TL;DR: Functional composition and functional diversity were the principal factors explaining plant productivity, plant percent nitrogen, plant total nitrogen, and light penetration in grassland plots.
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