Biodiversity promotes resistance but dominant species shape recovery of grasslands under extreme drought

Author:

Bazzichetto Manuele12ORCID,Sperandii Marta Gaia23ORCID,Penone Caterina4ORCID,Keil Petr1ORCID,Allan Eric4ORCID,Lepš Jan56ORCID,Prati Daniel4,Fischer Markus4,Bolliger Ralph4ORCID,Gossner Martin M.78ORCID,de Bello Francesco26ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Environmental Sciences, Department of Spatial Sciences Czech University of Life Sciences Prague Praha‐Suchdol Czech Republic

2. Centro de Investigaciones Sobre Desertificación (CSIC‐UV‐GV) Albal Valencia Spain

3. Department of Botany and Zoology, Faculty of Science Masaryk University Brno Czech Republic

4. Institute of Plant Sciences University of Bern Bern Switzerland

5. Biology Centre, Institute of Entomology Czech Academy of Sciences České Budějovice Czech Republic

6. Department of Botany, Faculty of Science University of South Bohemia České Budějovice Czech Republic

7. Institute of Terrestrial Ecosystems, ETH Zurich Zurich Switzerland

8. Forest Health & Biotic Interactions Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL Birmensdorf Switzerland

Abstract

Abstract How biodiversity underpins ecosystem resistance (i.e. ability to withstand environmental perturbations) and recovery (i.e. ability to return to a pre‐perturbation state), and thus, stability under extreme climatic events is a timely question in ecology. To date, most studies have focussed on the role of taxonomic diversity, neglecting how community functional composition and diversity beget stability under exceptional climatic conditions. In addition, land use potentially modulates how biodiversity and ecosystem functions respond to extreme climatic conditions. Using an 11‐year time‐series of plant biomass from 150 permanent grassland plots spanning a gradient of land‐use intensity, we examined how taxonomic and functional components of biodiversity affected resistance and recovery of biomass under extreme drought. The association between biodiversity, land use and biomass varied across years, especially in the driest years. Species‐rich or functionally diverse communities (associated with low land‐use intensity) buffered extreme droughts better, while species‐poor communities or those dominated by fast‐growing species (associated with high land‐use intensity) had higher recovery capabilities after a moderate‐to‐extreme drought. Synthesis. Our results show that plant community functional and taxonomic components determine grasslands resistance and recovery under moderate‐to‐extreme drought. In turn, this points to the importance of designing landscapes with both extensively and intensively managed grasslands. Functionally or taxonomically rich communities (favoured under low land‐use intensity) would preserve biomass under extreme droughts, whereas species‐poor or fast‐growing communities (favoured by high land‐use intensity) would restore biomass after extreme droughts.

Funder

HORIZON EUROPE Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions

HORIZON EUROPE European Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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