Relationships between species richness and ecosystem services in Amazonian forests strongly influenced by biogeographical strata and forest types

Publication date

2022-12

Authors

Steur, GijsORCID 0000-0002-9273-5105ISNI 0000000492491176
ter Steege, Hans
Verburg, R.W.ORCID 0000-0002-1651-8037ISNI 0000000388661016
Sabatier, Daniel
Molino, Jean‑François
Bánki, Olaf S.
Castellanos, Hernan
Stropp, Juliana
Fonty, Émile
Ruysschaert, Sofie

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Despite increasing attention for relationships between species richness and ecosystem services, for tropical forests such relationships are still under discussion. Contradicting relationships have been reported concerning carbon stock, while little is known about relationships concerning timber stock and the abundance of non-timber forest product producing plant species (NTFP abundance). Using 151 1-ha plots, we related tree and arborescent palm species richness to carbon stock, timber stock and NTFP abundance across the Guiana Shield, and using 283 1-ha plots, to carbon stock across all of Amazonia. We analysed how environmental heterogeneity influenced these relationships, assessing differences across and within multiple forest types, biogeographic regions and subregions. Species richness showed significant relationships with all three ecosystem services, but relationships differed between forest types and among biogeographical strata. We found that species richness was positively associated to carbon stock in all biogeographical strata. This association became obscured by variation across biogeographical regions at the scale of Amazonia, resembling a Simpson’s paradox. By contrast, species richness was weakly or not significantly related to timber stock and NTFP abundance, suggesting that species richness is not a good predictor for these ecosystem services. Our findings illustrate the importance of environmental stratification in analysing biodiversity-ecosystem services relationships.

Keywords

Biodiversity, Carbon, Ecosystem, Forests, Trees, Productivity, Plant diversity, Carbon stocks, Tropical forests, Tree diversity, Aboveground biomass, General

Citation

Steur, G, ter Steege, H, Verburg, R W, Sabatier, D, Molino, JF, Bánki, O S, Castellanos, H, Stropp, J, Fonty, É, Ruysschaert, S, Galbraith, D, Kalamandeen, M, van Andel, T R, Brienen, R J W, Phillips, O L, Feeley, K J, Terborgh, J & Verweij, P A 2022, 'Relationships between species richness and ecosystem services in Amazonian forests strongly influenced by biogeographical strata and forest types', Scientific Reports, vol. 12, no. 1, 5960, pp. 1-11. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-09786-6