4.5 Article

Density may alter diversity-productivity relationships in experimental plant communities

Journal

BASIC AND APPLIED ECOLOGY
Volume 6, Issue 6, Pages 505-517

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.baae.2005.04.002

Keywords

constant final yield; community biomass; community density; ecosystem functioning; evenness; plant functional groups; size variation; species richness

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Contemporary biodiversity experiments, in which plant species richness is manipulated and aboveground productivity of the system measured, generally demonstrate that lowering plant species richness reduces productivity. However, we propose that community density may in part compensate for this reduction of productivity at low diversity. We conducted a factorial experiment in which plant functional group richness was held constant at three, white plant species richness increased from three to six to 12 species and community density from 440 to 1050 to 2525 seedlings m(-2). Response variables included density, evenness and above- and belowground biomass at harvest. The density gradient converged slightly during the course of the experiment due to about 10% mortality at the highest sowing density. Evenness measured in terms of aboveground biomass at harvest significantly declined with density, but the effect was weak. Overall, aboveground, belowground and total biomass increased significantly with species richness and community density. However, a significant interaction between species richness and community density occurred for both total and aboveground biomass, indicating that the diversity-productivity relationship was flatter at higher than at lower density. Thus, high species richness enabled low-density communities to reach productivity levels otherwise seen only at high density. The relative contributions of the three functional groups C-3, C-4 and nitrogen-fixers to aboveground biomass were less influenced by community density at high than at low species richness. We interpret the interaction effects between community density and species richness on community biomass by expanding findings about constant yield and size variation from monocultures to plant mixtures. (c) 2005 Gesellschaft fur Okologie. Published by Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.

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