Research article - Peer-reviewed, 2020
Do biodiversity-ecosystem functioning experiments inform stakeholders how to simultaneously conserve biodiversity and increase ecosystem service provisioning in grasslands?
Klaus, Valentin H.; Whittingham, Mark J.; Baldi, Andras; Eggers, Sonke; Francksen, Richard M.; Hiron, Matthew; Lellei-Kovacs, Eszter; Rhymer, Caroline M.; Buchmann, NinaAbstract
Two key stakeholders primarily important for nature conservation are farmers (and their lobby groups) and conservationists. Both have substantial inputs into environmental strategies and policies calling for biodiversity conservation aimed to directly increase ecosystem services. The scientific literature concurs that as biological diversity increases so do ecosystem functions and services in grasslands. While the evidence for this is strong, the majority comes from controlled small-scale biodiversity-ecosystem functioning (BEF) experiments. Thus, it is unclear whether the scientific basis for implementing BEF relationships into practice is sufficiently evidenced. Here we explore the applicability of findings from BEF experiments to the conservation and management of temperate grassland, a widespread and potentially highly biodiverse habitat. While we acknowledge that BEF research can reveal insights into fundamental mechanisms, the saturation of biodiversity effects at low levels and unrealistic (management) treatments widely impede the applicability of these experimental results to permanent grasslands. Additionally, the integration of BEF research results into practice is considerably hampered by experimental studies not answering stakeholders' crucial questions, e.g. is there evidence of biodiversity conservation potentials? Thus, stakeholders do not have a strong evidence base for taking decisions for the addressed management goals, except intensive production in (species-poor) temporary grasslands. If BEF work is to inform stakeholders future research needs to overcome unrealistic management, missing stakeholder involvement and ineffective communication. A new generation of applied BEF experiments employing applied, multi-actor approaches is needed to facilitate the relevance of BEF research for nature conservation, agriculture and land management.Keywords
BEF research; Biodiversity crisis; Real-world grassland management; Ecosystem services; Knowledge generation; Plant species richnessPublished in
Biological Conservation2020, volume: 245, article number: 108552
Publisher: ELSEVIER SCI LTD
Authors' information
Klaus, Valentin H.
Swiss Fed Inst Technol
Whittingham, Mark J.
Newcastle Univ
Baldi, Andras
Ctr Ecol Res
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Ecology
Francksen, Richard M.
Newcastle Univ
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Ecology
Lellei-Kovacs, Eszter
Ctr Ecol Res
Rhymer, Caroline M.
Newcastle Univ
Buchmann, Nina
Swiss Fed Inst Technol
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG15 Life on land
UKÄ Subject classification
Ecology
Publication Identifiers
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2020.108552
URI (permanent link to this page)
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/105766