Food webs obscure the strength of plant diversity effects on primary productivity

Publication date

2017-04

Authors

Seabloom, Eric W
Kinkel, Linda
Borer, Elizabeth T
Hautier, YannORCID 0000-0003-4347-7741ISNI 0000000351202609
Montgomery, Rebecca A
Tilman, David

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Letter
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Plant diversity experiments generally find that increased diversity causes increased productivity; however, primary productivity is typically measured in the presence of a diverse food web, including pathogens, mutualists and herbivores. If food web impacts on productivity vary with plant diversity, as predicted by both theoretical and empirical studies, estimates of the effect of plant diversity on productivity may be biased. We experimentally removed arthropods, foliar fungi and soil fungi from the longest-running plant diversity experiment. We found that fungi and arthropods removed a constant, large proportion of biomass leading to a greater reduction of total biomass in high diversity plots. As a result, the effect of diversity on measured plant productivity was much higher in the absence of fungi and arthropods. Thus, diversity increases productivity more than reported in previous studies that did not control for the effects of heterotrophic consumption.

Keywords

Biodiversity, dilution effect, pathogens, community ecology, ecosystem ecology, Taverne

Citation

Seabloom, E W, Kinkel, L, Borer, E T, Hautier, Y, Montgomery, R A & Tilman, D 2017, 'Food webs obscure the strength of plant diversity effects on primary productivity', Ecology Letters, vol. 20, no. 4, pp. 505–512. https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.12754