Land use imperils plant and animal community stability through changes in asynchrony rather than diversityOpen Access

Blüthgen N., Simons N., Jung K., Prati D., Renner S., Boch S., Fischer M., Hölzel N., Klaus V., Kleinebecker T., Tschapka M., Weisser W., Gossner M.

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Human land use may detrimentally affect biodiversity, yet long-term stability of species communities is vital for maintaining ecosystem functioning. Community stability can be achieved by higher species diversity (portfolio effect), higher asynchrony across species (insurance hypothesis) and higher abundance of populations. However, the relative importance of these stabilizing pathways and whether they interact with land use in real-world ecosystems is unknown. We monitored inter-annual fluctuations of 2,671 plant, arthropod, bird and bat species in 300 sites from three regions. Arthropods show 2.0-fold and birds 3.7-fold higher community fluctuations in grasslands than in forests, suggesting a negative impact of forest conversion. Land-use intensity in forests has a negative net impact on stability of bats and in grasslands on birds. Our findings demonstrate that asynchrony across species - much more than species diversity alone - is the main driver of variation in stability across sites and requires more attention in sustainable management.

Details about the publication

JournalNature Communications
Volume7
Page range10697null
StatusPublished
Release year2016
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
KeywordsBiodiversity; Community Ecology; Forest Ecology; Grassland Ecology

Authors from the University of Münster

Hölzel, Norbert
Klaus, Valentin
Kleinebecker, Till

Projects the publication originates from

Duration: 01/04/2014 - 31/03/2017 | 3rd Funding period
Funded by: DFG - Priority Programme
Type of project: Subproject in DFG-joint project hosted outside University of Münster
Duration: 09/02/2011 - 08/01/2014 | 2nd Funding period
Funded by: DFG - Priority Programme
Type of project: Subproject in DFG-joint project hosted outside University of Münster
Duration: 01/03/2009 - 28/02/2011 | 1st Funding period
Funded by: DFG - Priority Programme
Type of project: Subproject in DFG-joint project hosted outside University of Münster