scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

What does species richness tell us about functional trait diversity? Predictions and evidence for responses of species and functional trait diversity to land-use change

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
A conceptual model taking a more mechanistic approach to the species-functional trait association in a context of land-use change is presented and empirical support is provided for the model's predictions demonstrating that the association of species and functional trait diversity follows various trajectories in response to land- use change.
Abstract
In the conservation literature on land-use change, it is often assumed that land-use intensification drives species loss, driving a loss of functional trait diversity and ecosystem function. Modern research, however, does not support this cascade of loss for all natural systems. In this paper we explore the errors in this assumption and present a conceptual model taking a more mechanistic approach to the species-functional trait association in a context of land-use change. We provide empirical support for our model's predictions demonstrating that the association of species and functional trait diversity follows various trajectories in response to land-use change. The central premise of our model is that land-use change impacts upon processes of community assembly, not species per se. From the model, it is clear that community context (i.e. type of disturbance, species pool size) will affect the response trajectory of the relationship between species and functional trait diversity in communities undergoing land-use change. The maintenance of ecosystem function and of species diversity in the face of increasing land-use change are complementary goals. The use of a more ecologically realistic model of responses of species and functional traits will improve our ability to make wise management decisions to achieve both aims in specific at-risk systems.

read more

Citations
More filters
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

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.

Land-use intensification reduces functionalredundancy and response diversity in plantcommunities

TL;DR: The results indicate that intensified management of ecosystems for resource extraction can increase their vulnerability to future disturbances, although specific relationships varied considerably among the different land-use gradients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Traits Without Borders: Integrating Functional Diversity Across Scales

TL;DR: This novel approach could revolutionize FD-based research by allowing quantification of the various FD components from organismal to macroecological scales, and allowing seamless transitions between scales.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hierarchical effects of environmental filters on the functional structure of plant communities: a case study in the French Alps

TL;DR: This paper tested the relative infl uence of multiple environmental factors on various metrics of plant functional trait structure and components of functional trait diversity in 82 vegetation plots in the Guisane Valley, French Alps to suggest that predicting plant community responses will require a hierarchical multi-facet approach.
References
More filters
Book

Ecological Diversity and its Measurement

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define definitions of diversity and apply them to the problem of measuring species diversity, choosing an index and interpreting diversity measures, and applying them to structural and structural diversity.
Journal ArticleDOI

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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vive la différence: plant functional diversity matters to ecosystem processes

TL;DR: Crossfertilization between approaches based on species richness on the one hand, and on functional traits and types on the other, is a promising way of gaining mechanistic insight into the links between plant diversity and ecosystem processes and contributing to practical management for the conservation of diversity andcosystem services.
Journal ArticleDOI

The diversity–stability debate

TL;DR: This issue — commonly referred to as the diversity–stability debate — is the subject of this review, which synthesizes historical ideas with recent advances and concludes that declines in diversity should be expected to accelerate the simplification of ecological communities.
Related Papers (5)