The hidden role of multi-trophic interactions in driving diversity-productivity relationships
- PMID: 34846785
- DOI: 10.1111/ele.13935
The hidden role of multi-trophic interactions in driving diversity-productivity relationships
Abstract
Resource-use complementarity of producer species is often invoked to explain the generally positive diversity-productivity relationships. Additionally, multi-trophic interactions that link processes across trophic levels have received increasing attention as a possible key driver. Given that both are integral to natural ecosystems, their interactive effect should be evident but has remained hidden. We address this issue by analysing diversity-productivity relationships in a simulation experiment of producer communities nested within complex food-webs, manipulating resource-use complementarity and multi-trophic animal richness. We show that these two mechanisms interactively create diverse communities of complementary producer species. This shapes diversity-productivity relationships such that their joint contribution generally exceeds their individual effects. Specifically, multi-trophic interactions in animal-rich ecosystems facilitate producer coexistence by preventing competitive exclusion despite overlaps in resource-use, which increases the realised complementarity. The interdependence of food-webs and producer complementarity in creating biodiversity-productivity relationships highlights the importance to adopt a multi-trophic perspective on biodiversity-ecosystem functioning relationships.
Keywords: biodiversity-ecosystem functioning; complex food-webs; primary production; resource-use complementarity; selection; trophic interaction; vertical diversity.
© 2021 The Authors. Ecology Letters published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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