Functionally and phylogenetically diverse plant communities key to soil biota


Autoria(s): Milcu A.; Allan E.; Roscher C.; Jenkins T.; Meyer S.T.; Flynn D.; Bessler H.; Buscot F.; Engels C.; Gubsch M.; Konig S.; Lipowsky A.; Loranger J.; Renker C.; Scherber C.; Schmid B.; Thebault E.; Wubet T.; Weisser W.W.; Scheu S.; Eisenhauer N.
Data(s)

2013

Resumo

Recent studies assessing the role of biological diversity for ecosystem functioning indicate that the diversity of functional traits and the evolutionary history of species in a community, not the number of taxonomic units, ultimately drives the biodiversity-ecosystem-function relationship. Here, we simultaneously assessed the importance of plant functional trait and phylogenetic diversity as predictors of major trophic groups of soil biota (abundance and diversity), six years from the onset of a grassland biodiversity experiment. Plant functional and phylogenetic diversity were generally better predictors of soil biota than the traditionally used species or functional group richness. Functional diversity was a reliable predictor for most biota, with the exception of soil microorganisms, which were better predicted by phylogenetic diversity. These results provide empirical support for the idea that the diversity of plant functional traits and the diversity of evolutionary lineages in a community are important for maintaining higher abundances and diversity of soil communities.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_9F0ED800CB8B

isbn:0012-9658

doi:10.1890/12-1936.1

isiid:000322336600022

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Ecology, vol. 94, no. 8, pp. 1878-1885

Palavras-Chave #above-belowground interactions; biodiversity; functional diversity; functional traits; Jena Experiment; phylogenetic diversity; plant species richness; soil fauna
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article