Nguyen, Diem
- Department of Forest Mycology and Plant Pathology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2016Peer reviewedOpen access
van der Plas, Fons; Nguyen, Diem; Stenlid, Jan; Fischer, Markus
There is considerable evidence that biodiversity promotes multiple ecosystem functions (multifunctionality), thus ensuring the delivery of ecosystem services important for human well-being. However, the mechanisms underlying this relationship are poorly understood, especially in natural ecosystems. We develop a novel approach to partition biodiversity effects on multifunctionality into three mechanisms and apply this to European forest data. We show that throughout Europe, tree diversity is positively related with multifunctionality when moderate levels of functioning are required, but negatively when very high function levels are desired. For two well-known mechanisms, 'complementarity' and 'selection', we detect only minor effects on multifunctionality. Instead a third, so far overlooked mechanism, the 'jack-of-all-trades' effect, caused by the averaging of individual species effects on function, drives observed patterns. Simulations demonstrate that jack-of-all-trades effects occur whenever species effects on different functions are not perfectly correlated, meaning they may contribute to diversity-multifunctionality relationships in many of the world's ecosystems.
Nature Communications
2016, Volume: 7, article number: 11109Publisher: NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
SDG3 Good health and well-being
Ecology
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms11109
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/80087