4.8 Article

Plant diversity effects on forage quality, yield and revenues of semi-natural grasslands

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-14541-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [BU1080/4-1]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation [FOR 456]
  3. Friedrich Schiller University Jena
  4. Max-Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, Jena
  5. Mercator Foundation Switzerland within a Zurich-Basel Plant Science Center PhD Fellowship program
  6. ETH Zurich

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In agricultural settings, plant diversity is often associated with low biomass yield and forage quality, while biodiversity experiments typically find the opposite. We address this controversy by assessing, over 1 year, plant diversity effects on biomass yield, forage quality (i.e. nutritive values), quality-adjusted yield (biomass yield x forage quality), and revenues across different management intensities (extensive to intensive) on subplots of a large-scale grassland biodiversity experiment. Plant diversity substantially increased quality-adjusted yield and revenues. These findings hold for a wide range of management intensities, i.e., fertilization levels and cutting frequencies, in semi-natural grasslands. Plant diversity was an important production factor independent of management intensity, as it enhanced quality-adjusted yield and revenues similarly to increasing fertilization and cutting frequency. Consequently, maintaining and reestablishing plant diversity could be a way to sustainably manage temperate grasslands.

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