The combined effects of scale and productivity on species richness

被引:60
|
作者
Weiher, E [1 ]
机构
[1] Mississippi State Univ, Dept Biol Sci, Mississippi State, MS 39762 USA
关键词
biomass; productivity; scale; soil organic content; species-area curve; species richness;
D O I
10.1046/j.1365-2745.1999.00412.x
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
1 Although species-area curves are well documented, we know little about how they vary along productivity gradients, nor do we have a firm understanding of whether the richness-productivity relationship is independent of scale. In order to investigate these relationships, 10 species-area curves were constructed for 10 sets of nested quadrats (from 0.25 m(2) to 150 m(2)) in herbaceous marshes where biomass ranged from 128 g m(-2) to 1050 g m(-2). 2 Slopes (z) of the species-area curves (logS = logc + zlogA) were positively correlated with production (whether measured as biomass or soil organic content). A possible cause of increased slope was larger potential species pools at high biomass. The constants (c) were negatively associated with production, which concurs with the general richness-productivity relationship. 4 Linear models were used to predict both c and z using biomass and soil organic content. Biomass explained about 38% of the variation in both z and logc. Soil organic content was a better predictor. It explained 60% of the variation in z and 41% of the variation in c. 5 The slopes (z) and constants (c) of the species-area curves were negatively correlated. Because c is the expected species richness at 1 m(2) and z strongly affects larger-scale richness, the results suggest that small-scale richness is not a good indicator of larger-scale richness. There was no significant relationship between species richness in small-scale (0.25 m(2)) quadrats and large-scale quadrats (150 m(2)). 6 These results suggest that the conflicting data that have led to recent debate over the richness-productivity relationship may reflect both the effects of scale and the natural history peculiarities of the systems studied.
引用
收藏
页码:1005 / 1011
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Scale dependence in the species-richness-productivity relationship: The role of species turnover
    Chalcraft, DR
    Williams, JW
    Smith, MD
    Willig, MR
    ECOLOGY, 2004, 85 (10) : 2701 - 2708
  • [2] Effects of productivity and disturbance on species richness: A neutral model
    Kadmon, Ronen
    Benjamini, Yuval
    AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2006, 167 (06): : 939 - 946
  • [3] Effects of plant species richness on stand structure and productivity
    Wacker, Luca
    Baudois, Oksana
    Eichenberger-Glinz, Susann
    Schmid, Bernhard
    JOURNAL OF PLANT ECOLOGY, 2009, 2 (02) : 95 - 106
  • [4] Predicting effects of ecosystem engineers on patch-scale species richness from primary productivity
    Wright, JP
    Jones, CG
    ECOLOGY, 2004, 85 (08) : 2071 - 2081
  • [5] Latitude, productivity and species richness
    Gillman, Len N.
    Wright, Shane D.
    Cusens, Jarrod
    McBride, Paul D.
    Malhi, Yadvinder
    Whittaker, Robert J.
    GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2015, 24 (01): : 107 - 117
  • [6] Are complementarity effects of species richness on productivity the strongest in species-rich communities?
    Michalet, Richard
    Delerue, Florian
    Liancourt, Pierre
    Pugnaire, Francisco I.
    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2021, 109 (05) : 2038 - 2046
  • [7] The interrelationship between productivity, plant species richness and livestock diet: a question of scale?
    Suess, Karin
    Storm, Christian
    Zimmermann, Kai
    Schwabe, Angelika
    APPLIED VEGETATION SCIENCE, 2007, 10 (02) : 169 - 182
  • [8] Impacts of species richness on productivity in a large-scale subtropical forest experiment
    Huang, Yuanyuan
    Chen, Yuxin
    Castro-Izaguirre, Nadia
    Baruffol, Martin
    Brezzi, Matteo
    Lang, Anne
    Li, Ying
    Haerdtle, Werner
    von Oheimb, Goddert
    Yang, Xuefei
    Liu, Xiaojuan
    Pei, Kequan
    Both, Sabine
    Yang, Bo
    Eichenberg, David
    Assmann, Thorsten
    Bauhus, Juergen
    Behrens, Thorsten
    Buscot, Francois
    Chen, Xiao-Yong
    Chesters, Douglas
    Ding, Bing-Yang
    Durka, Walter
    Erfmeier, Alexandra
    Fang, Jingyun
    Fischer, Markus
    Guo, Liang-Dong
    Guo, Dali
    Gutknecht, Jessica L. M.
    He, Jin-Sheng
    He, Chun-Ling
    Hector, Andy
    Hoenig, Lydia
    Hu, Ren-Yong
    Klein, Alexandra-Maria
    Kuehn, Peter
    Liang, Yu
    Li, Shan
    Michalski, Stefan
    Scherer-Lorenzen, Michael
    Schmidt, Karsten
    Scholten, Thomas
    Schuldt, Andreas
    Shi, Xuezheng
    Tan, Man-Zhi
    Tang, Zhiyao
    Trogisch, Stefan
    Wang, Zhengwen
    Welk, Erik
    Wirth, Christian
    SCIENCE, 2018, 362 (6410) : 80 - +
  • [9] The species richness-productivity controversy
    Schmid, B
    TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2002, 17 (03) : 113 - 114
  • [10] The relationship between productivity and species richness
    Waide, RB
    Willig, MR
    Steiner, CF
    Mittelbach, G
    Gough, L
    Dodson, SI
    Juday, GP
    Parmenter, R
    ANNUAL REVIEW OF ECOLOGY AND SYSTEMATICS, 1999, 30 : 257 - 300