Publicación: PLANT SPECIES RICHNESS AND ECOSYSTEM MULTIFUNCTIONALITY IN GLOBAL DRYLANDS

Fecha
2012
Autores
Título de la revista
ISSN de la revista
Título del volumen
Editor
LECTURE NOTES IN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE SUBSERIES OF LECTURE NOTES IN COMPUTER SCIENCE
Resumen
EXPERIMENTS SUGGEST THAT BIODIVERSITY ENHANCES THE ABILITY OF ECOSYSTEMS TO MAINTAIN MULTIPLE FUNCTIONS, SUCH AS CARBON STORAGE, PRODUCTIVITY, AND THE BUILDUP OF NUTRIENT POOLS(MULTIFUNCTIONALITY). HOWEVER, THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN BIODIVERSITY AND MULTIFUNCTIONALITY HAS NEVER BEEN ASSESSED GLOBALLY IN NATURAL ECOSYSTEMS. WE REPORT HERE ON A GLOBAL EMPIRICAL STUDY RELATING PLANT SPECIES RICHNESS AND ABIOTIC FACTORS TO MULTIFUNCTIONALITY IN DRYLANDS, WHICH COLLECTIVELY COVER 41% OF EARTHS LAND SURFACE AND SUPPORT OVER 38% OF THE HUMAN POPULATION. MULTIFUNCTIONALITY WAS POSITIVELY AND SIGNIFICANTLY RELATED TO SPECIES RICHNESS. THE BEST-FITTING MODELS ACCOUNTED FOR OVER 55% OF THE VARIATION IN MULTIFUNCTIONALITY AND ALWAYS INCLUDED SPECIES RICHNESS AS A PREDICTOR VARIABLE. OUR RESULTS SUGGEST THAT THE PRESERVATION OF PLANT BIODIVERSITY IS CRUCIAL TO BUFFER NEGATIVE EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE AND DESERTIFICATION IN DRYLANDS.