Temporal stability of biomass in annual plant communities is driven by species diversity and asynchrony, but not dominance

被引:18
|
作者
Kigel, Jaime [1 ]
Konsens, Irit [1 ]
Segev, Udi [1 ]
Sternberg, Marcelo [2 ]
机构
[1] Hebrew Univ Jerusalem, Robert H Smith Fac Agr Food & Environm, Inst Plant Sci & Genet Agr, Rehovot, Israel
[2] Tel Aviv Univ, George S Wise Fac Life Sci, Sch Plant Sci & Food Secur, Tel Aviv, Israel
关键词
compensatory dynamics; dominance; evenness; Mediterranean; precipitation; primary productivity; semi‐ arid; species diversity; species richness; ECOSYSTEM STABILITY; STATISTICAL INEVITABILITY; BIODIVERSITY; PRODUCTIVITY; GRASSLAND; PRECIPITATION; VARIABILITY; CONSEQUENCES; DYNAMICS; FLUCTUATIONS;
D O I
10.1111/jvs.13012
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Aims Primary biomass production is a fundamental process for ecosystem functioning. Yet, little is known on the mechanisms driving temporal stability of biomass production in annual plant communities, particularly when subjected to highly variable environments and undergoing temporal changes in species composition. We aimed to disentangle the relative importance of biomass production, species diversity, dominance and asynchrony of species fluctuations as drivers of biomass stability in mediterranean and semi-arid annual plant communities. Location Mediterranean (31 degrees 42 ' N; 35 degrees 03 ' E) and semi-arid (31 degrees 23 ' N; 34 degrees 54 ' E) sites, Israel. Methods Above-ground biomass and species abundance were monitored in 15 plots of 250 m(2) per site during eight consecutive years. Relationships between stability drivers and community stability were studied at the regional (between sites) and local (within sites) spatial scales. Results Community biomass stability (mean biomass/SD) increased from the semi-arid to the mediterranean site concomitantly with higher biomass production, richness, and evenness. Differences in stability between sites were due to opposite effects of site conditions on the mean and SD of community biomass, leading to higher stability in the mediterranean site. Within sites, species asynchrony was the key driver of stability at the local spatial scale. Richness and biomass production affected stability indirectly through asynchrony, but in different ways at each site. At the mediterranean site, these factors had indirect negative effects on stability by reducing asynchrony, but did not rescind a positive effect of asynchrony on community stability. At the semi-arid site, biomass production had indirect positive effects on stability through asynchrony, while richness had no effect on asynchrony and stability. Stability was not driven by species evenness in either site. Conclusions Our study provides new insights into the complex control of biomass stability in the dynamics of mediterranean and semi-arid annual plant communities, with different mechanisms driving stability across the regional vs local spatial scales.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Soil Communities Promote Temporal Stability and Species Asynchrony in Experimental Grassland Communities
    Pellkofer, Sarah
    van der Heijden, Marcel G. A.
    Schmid, Bernhard
    Wagg, Cameron
    PLOS ONE, 2016, 11 (02):
  • [2] Temporal stability of aboveground biomass is governed by species asynchrony in temperate forests
    Yuan, Zuoqiang
    Ali, Arshad
    Wang, Shaopeng
    Wang, Xugao
    Lin, Fei
    Wang, Yunyun
    Fang, Shuai
    Hao, Zhanqing
    Loreau, Michel
    Jiang, Lin
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2019, 107
  • [3] Dominant species, rather than diversity, regulates temporal stability of plant communities
    Takehiro Sasaki
    William K. Lauenroth
    Oecologia, 2011, 166 : 761 - 768
  • [4] Dominant species, rather than diversity, regulates temporal stability of plant communities
    Sasaki, Takehiro
    Lauenroth, William K.
    OECOLOGIA, 2011, 166 (03) : 761 - 768
  • [5] Plant diversity controls arthropod biomass and temporal stability
    Borer, Elizabeth T.
    Seabloom, Eric W.
    Tilman, David
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2012, 15 (12) : 1457 - 1464
  • [6] Plant litter influences the temporal stability of plant community biomass in an alpine meadow by altering the stability and asynchrony of plant functional groups
    Ma, Zhouwen
    Zeng, Yifeng
    Wu, Jing
    Zhou, Qingping
    Hou, Fujiang
    FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, 2022, 36 (01) : 148 - 158
  • [7] Nutrient enrichment weakens community temporal stability via asynchrony and species dominance in a subalpine grassland
    Gan, Xiaoling
    Li, Weibin
    Ye, Xiaoshuang
    Jiang, Yuan
    Zhao, Chuanyan
    AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT, 2025, 379
  • [8] Response trait diversity and species asynchrony underlie the diversity-stability relationship in Romanian bird communities
    White, Hannah J.
    Bailey, Joseph J.
    Bogdan, Ciortan
    Ross, Samuel R. P. -J.
    JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY, 2023, 92 (12) : 2309 - 2322
  • [9] Temporal stability in forest productivity increases with tree diversity due to asynchrony in species dynamics
    Morin, Xavier
    Fahse, Lorenz
    de Mazancourt, Claire
    Scherer-Lorenzen, Michael
    Bugmann, Harald
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2014, 17 (12) : 1526 - 1535
  • [10] Impact of exotic invasion on the temporal stability of natural annual plant communities
    Valone, Thomas J.
    Balaban-Feld, Jesse
    OIKOS, 2018, 127 (01) : 56 - 62