Ecology and Evolution (Sep 2020)

A landscape‐scale assessment of the relationship between grassland functioning, community diversity, and functional traits

  • Hanneke van 'tVeen,
  • Loïc Chalmandrier,
  • Nadine Sandau,
  • Michael P. Nobis,
  • Patrice Descombes,
  • Achilleas Psomas,
  • Yann Hautier,
  • Loïc Pellissier

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6650
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 18
pp. 9906 – 9919

Abstract

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Abstract Livestock farmers rely on a high and stable grassland productivity for fodder production to sustain their livelihoods. Future drought events related to climate change, however, threaten grassland functionality in many regions across the globe. The introduction of sustainable grassland management could buffer these negative effects. According to the biodiversity–productivity hypothesis, productivity positively associates with local biodiversity. The biodiversity–insurance hypothesis states that higher biodiversity enhances the temporal stability of productivity. To date, these hypotheses have mostly been tested through experimental studies under restricted environmental conditions, hereby neglecting climatic variations at a landscape‐scale. Here, we provide a landscape‐scale assessment of the contribution of species richness, functional composition, temperature, and precipitation on grassland productivity. We found that the variation in grassland productivity during the growing season was best explained by functional trait composition. The community mean of plant preference for nutrients explained 24.8% of the variation in productivity and the community mean of specific leaf area explained 18.6%, while species richness explained only 2.4%. Temperature and precipitation explained an additional 22.1% of the variation in productivity. Our results indicate that functional trait composition is an important predictor of landscape‐scale grassland productivity.

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