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Understanding the mechanisms underlying diversity-productivity relationships (DPRs) is crucial to mitigating the effects of forest biodiversity loss. Tree-tree interactions in diverse communities are fundamental in driving growth rates, potentially shaping the emergent DPRs, yet remain poorly explored. Here, using data from a large-scale forest biodiversity experiment in subtropical China, we demonstrated that changes in individual tree productivity were driven by species-specific pairwise interactions, with higher positive net pairwise interaction effects on trees in more diverse neighbourhoods. By perturbing the interactions strength from empirical data in simulations, we revealed that the positive differences between inter- and intra-specific interactions were the critical determinant for the emergence of positive DPRs. Surprisingly, the condition for positive DPRs corresponded to the condition for coexistence. Our results thus provide a novel insight into how pairwise tree interactions regulate DPRs, with implications for identifying the tree mixtures with maximized productivity to guide forest restoration and reforestation efforts.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ele.14338 | DOI Listing |
Plants (Basel)
July 2025
Center for Plant Biology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA.
Niche complementarity is suggested to be a main driver of productivity overyielding in diverse environments due to enhanced resource use efficiency and reduced competition. Here, we combined multiple different approaches to demonstrate that niche overlap is the most likely cause to explain a lack of overyielding of three tree species when grown in different species combinations. First, in an experimental planting we found no relationship between productivity and species diversity for leaf, wood, or root production (no slope was significantly different from zero), suggesting a lack of niche differences among species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFISME Commun
January 2025
State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science / National Observation and Research Station for the Taiwan Strait Marine Ecosystem (T-SMART) / Fujian Provincial Key Laboratory for Coastal Ecology and Environmental Studies / College of the Environment and Ecology, Xiamen University, Xiamen, Fuji
Understanding the diversity-productivity relationship (DPR) is crucial for elucidating the ecological functions of marine bacterioplankton. However, studies have often focused on species diversity, neglecting phylogenetic diversity, which may offer deeper insights into the complex ecological processes shaping DPR in natural systems. This study addressed this gap by exploring the role of phylogenetic diversity in bacterioplankton productivity in the northern South China Sea, a coastal ecosystem influenced by estuarine plumes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Bot
July 2025
Département de Phytologie, Faculté des Sciences de l'Agriculture et de l'Alimentation, Université Laval, Québec, Québec, Canada.
Premise: Biodiversity loss and increasing extreme weather events disrupt the functioning of ecosystems and thus their ability to provide services. While the interplay among various climatic constraints, diversity and productivity has received increasing attention in the last decades, the role of flooding has been overlooked.
Methods: In a greenhouse experiment, we manipulated species richness and water regimes to evaluate the influence of flooding on species diversity-productivity relationships.
Trends Ecol Evol
July 2025
Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences, University of Tartu, J. Liivi 2, 50409 Tartu, Estonia.
Plant coexistence and diversity-productivity relationships are often studied separately, yet both are shaped by the same biotic interactions. Here we focus on how host-specificity among soil pathogens and mutualists alters niche and fitness differences among plant species, subsequently modifying biodiversity effects on productivity. Specialist pathogens can generate niche differences through density-dependent processes, thereby stabilizing plant coexistence and enhancing complementarity effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOecologia
May 2025
Division of Forest, Nature and Landscape, Department of Earth & Environmental Sciences, KU Leuven, Celestijnenlaan 200 E, Box 2411, BE-3001, Louvain, Belgium.
Tropical dry forests remain vital to rural communities but are often degraded and require restoration. Biodiversity plays a crucial role in maintaining ecosystem functioning and resilience and in providing essential services in these ecosystems. In many cases, restoration involves planting monospecific plantations of robust exotic species; however, detailed ecological studies are required to understand how native species mixtures could become successful for restoration purposes.
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