4.3 Article

Biogenic habitat creation affects biomass-diversity relationships in plant communities

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.ppees.2009.03.002

Keywords

Alpine ecology; Ecosystem functioning; Ecosystem engineering; Facilitation; Nurse effect; Positive interactions

Funding

  1. FONDECYT [3060095]
  2. FONDAP-FONDECYT [1501-0001]
  3. ICM [P05-002]
  4. NSF [DEB-0072909]
  5. University of California
  6. Santa Barbara campus

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Biogenic habitat creation refers to the ability of some organisms to create, maintain or destroy habitats. These habitat changes affect species diversity of natural communities, but it remains to be elucidated if this process also affects the link between ecosystem functions and species diversity. Based on the widely accepted positive relationships between ecosystem functions and species diversity, we hypothesize that these relationships should be different in biogenically created habitat patches as compared to unmodified habitat patches. We tested this hypothesis by assessing the effects of a high-Andean cushion plant, Azorella madreporica, which creates habitat patches with different environmental conditions than in the surrounding open areas with reduced vegetation cover. We used observational and experimental approaches to compare the plant biomass-species richness relationships between habitat patches created by A. madreporica cushions and the surrounding habitat without cushion plants. The observational assessment of these relationships was conducted by counting and collecting plant species within and outside cushion patches. In the experiment, species richness was manipulated within and outside cushion patches. The cushion plant itself was not included in these approaches because we were interested in measuring its effects. Results of both approaches indicated that, for a given level of species richness, plant biomass within cushions was higher than in the surrounding open areas. Furthermore, both approaches indicated that the shape of plant biomass-species richness curves differed between these habitat types. These findings suggest that habitat modifications performed by A. madreporica cushions would be positively affecting the relationships between ecosystem functions and species diversity. (C) 2009 Rubel Foundation, ETH Zurich. Published by Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.

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