Effects of total resources, resource ratios, and species richness on algal productivity and evenness at both metacommunity and local scales.

The study of the interrelationship between productivity and biodiversity is a major research field in ecology. Theory predicts that if essential resources are heterogeneously distributed across a metacommunity, single species may dominate productivity in individual metacommunity patches, but a mixtu...

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Main Authors: Lars Gamfeldt, Helmut Hillebrand
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3130793?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-8b63853e2ff44dc28913aca6162434fe2020-11-25T00:26:49ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0167e2197210.1371/journal.pone.0021972Effects of total resources, resource ratios, and species richness on algal productivity and evenness at both metacommunity and local scales.Lars GamfeldtHelmut HillebrandThe study of the interrelationship between productivity and biodiversity is a major research field in ecology. Theory predicts that if essential resources are heterogeneously distributed across a metacommunity, single species may dominate productivity in individual metacommunity patches, but a mixture of species will maximize productivity across the whole metacommunity. It also predicts that a balanced supply of resources within local patches should favor species coexistence, whereas resource imbalance would favor the dominance of one species. We performed an experiment with five freshwater algal species to study the effects of total supply of resources, their ratios, and species richness on biovolume production and evenness at the scale of both local patches and metacommunities. Generally, algal biovolume increased, whereas algal resource use efficiency (RUE) and evenness decreased with increasing total supply of resources in mixed communities containing all five species. In contrast to predictions for biovolume production, the species mixtures did not outperform all monocultures at the scale of metacommunities. In other words, we observed no general transgressive overyielding. However, RUE was always higher in mixtures than predicted from monocultures, and analyses indicate that resource partitioning or facilitation in mixtures resulted in higher-than-expected productivity at high resource supply. Contrasting our predictions for the local scale, balanced supply of resources did not generally favor higher local evenness, however lowest evenness was confined to patches with the most imbalanced supply. Thus, our study provides mixed support for recent theoretical advancements to understand biodiversity-productivity relationships.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3130793?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lars Gamfeldt
Helmut Hillebrand
spellingShingle Lars Gamfeldt
Helmut Hillebrand
Effects of total resources, resource ratios, and species richness on algal productivity and evenness at both metacommunity and local scales.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Lars Gamfeldt
Helmut Hillebrand
author_sort Lars Gamfeldt
title Effects of total resources, resource ratios, and species richness on algal productivity and evenness at both metacommunity and local scales.
title_short Effects of total resources, resource ratios, and species richness on algal productivity and evenness at both metacommunity and local scales.
title_full Effects of total resources, resource ratios, and species richness on algal productivity and evenness at both metacommunity and local scales.
title_fullStr Effects of total resources, resource ratios, and species richness on algal productivity and evenness at both metacommunity and local scales.
title_full_unstemmed Effects of total resources, resource ratios, and species richness on algal productivity and evenness at both metacommunity and local scales.
title_sort effects of total resources, resource ratios, and species richness on algal productivity and evenness at both metacommunity and local scales.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description The study of the interrelationship between productivity and biodiversity is a major research field in ecology. Theory predicts that if essential resources are heterogeneously distributed across a metacommunity, single species may dominate productivity in individual metacommunity patches, but a mixture of species will maximize productivity across the whole metacommunity. It also predicts that a balanced supply of resources within local patches should favor species coexistence, whereas resource imbalance would favor the dominance of one species. We performed an experiment with five freshwater algal species to study the effects of total supply of resources, their ratios, and species richness on biovolume production and evenness at the scale of both local patches and metacommunities. Generally, algal biovolume increased, whereas algal resource use efficiency (RUE) and evenness decreased with increasing total supply of resources in mixed communities containing all five species. In contrast to predictions for biovolume production, the species mixtures did not outperform all monocultures at the scale of metacommunities. In other words, we observed no general transgressive overyielding. However, RUE was always higher in mixtures than predicted from monocultures, and analyses indicate that resource partitioning or facilitation in mixtures resulted in higher-than-expected productivity at high resource supply. Contrasting our predictions for the local scale, balanced supply of resources did not generally favor higher local evenness, however lowest evenness was confined to patches with the most imbalanced supply. Thus, our study provides mixed support for recent theoretical advancements to understand biodiversity-productivity relationships.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3130793?pdf=render
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