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- Title
Biodiversity, photosynthetic mode, and ecosystem services differ between native and novel ecosystems.
- Authors
Martin, Leanne; Polley, H.; Daneshgar, Pedram; Harris, Mary; Wilsey, Brian
- Abstract
Human activities have caused non-native plant species with novel ecological interactions to persist on landscapes, and it remains controversial whether these species alter multiple aspects of communities and ecosystems. We tested whether native and exotic grasslands differ in species diversity, ecosystem services, and an important aspect of functional diversity (C:C proportions) by sampling 42 sites along a latitudinal gradient and conducting a controlled experiment. Exotic-dominated grasslands had drastically lower plant diversity and slightly higher tissue N concentrations and forage quality compared to native-dominated sites. Exotic sites were strongly dominated by C species at southern and C species at northern latitudes with a sharp transition at 36-38°, whereas native sites contained C:C mixtures. Large differences in C:C proportions and temporal niche partitioning were found between native and exotic mixtures in the experiment, implying that differences in C:C proportions along the latitudinal gradient are caused partially by species themselves. Our results indicate that the replacement of native- by exotic-dominated grasslands has created a management tradeoff (high diversity versus high levels of certain ecosystem services) and that models of global change impacts and C/C distribution should consider effects of exotic species.
- Subjects
BIODIVERSITY; HUMAN activity recognition; ECOSYSTEMS; GRASSLANDS; INTRODUCED species; LATITUDE; NOVEL ecosystems
- Publication
Oecologia, 2014, Vol 175, Issue 2, p687
- ISSN
0029-8549
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00442-014-2911-0