4.8 Article

Plant biodiversity and the regeneration of soil fertility

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2111321118

Keywords

biodiversity; soil fertility; carbon storage; trait trade-offs; soil restoration

Funding

  1. NSF LTER Grants [DEB-9411972, DEB-0080382, DEB-0620652, DEB-1234162, DEB-1831944]

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The study showed that plant diversity plays a crucial role in regenerating soil fertility on degraded sandy soil. Higher plant diversity led to greater increases in soil nitrogen, potassium, calcium, magnesium, cation exchange capacity, and carbon, as well as in plant biomass. Creative use of plant diversity could aid efforts to regenerate soil carbon stores and soil fertility.
Fertile soils have been an essential resource for humanity for 10,000 y, but the ecological mechanisms involved in the creation and restoration of fertile soils, and especially the role of plant diversity, are poorly understood. Here we use results of a long-term, unfertilized plant biodiversity experiment to determine whether biodiversity, especially plant functional biodiversity, impacted the regeneration of fertility on a degraded sandy soil. After 23 y, plots containing 16 perennial grassland plant species had, relative to monocultures of these same species, -30 to 90% greater increases in soil nitrogen, potassium, calcium, magnesium, cation exchange capacity, and carbon and had -150 to 370% greater amounts of N, K, Ca, and Mg in plant biomass. Our results suggest that biodiversity, likely in combination with the increased plant productivity caused by higher biodiversity, led to greater soil fertility. Moreover, plots with high plant functional diversity, those containing grasses, legumes, and forbs, accumulated significantly greater N, K, Ca, and Mg in the total nutrient pool (plant biomass and soil) than did plots containing just one of these three functional groups. Plant species in these functional groups had trade-offs between their tissue N content, tissue K content, and root mass, suggesting why species from all three functional groups were essential for regenerating soil fertility. Our findings suggest that efforts to regenerate soil C stores and soil fertility may be aided by creative uses of plant diversity.

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