Communications Earth & Environment (Jan 2025)

Landscape diversity promotes landscape functioning in North America

  • Sarah Mayor,
  • Florian Altermatt,
  • Thomas W. Crowther,
  • Iris Hordijk,
  • Simon Landauer,
  • Jacqueline Oehri,
  • Merin Reji Chacko,
  • Michael E. Schaepman,
  • Bernhard Schmid,
  • Pascal A. Niklaus

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02000-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Biodiversity–ecosystem functioning experiments have established generally positive species richness-productivity relationships in plots of single ecosystem types, typically grassland or forest. However, it remains unclear whether these findings apply in real-world landscapes that resemble a heterogeneous mosaic of different ecosystem and plant types that interact through biotic and abiotic processes. Here, we show that landscape-level diversity, measured as number of land-cover types (different ecosystems) per 250×250 m, is positively related to landscape-wide remotely-sensed primary production across all of North America, covering 16 of 18 ecoregions of Earth. At higher landscape diversity, productivity was temporally more stable, and 20-year greening trends were accelerated. These effects occurred independent of local species diversity, suggesting emergent mechanisms at hitherto neglected levels of biological organization. Specifically, mechanisms related to interactions among land-cover types unfold at the scale of entire landscapes, similar to, but not necessarily resulting from, interactions between species within single ecosystems.