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The supply of multiple ecosystem services requires biodiversity across spatial scales

Gaëtane Le Provost Orcid Logo, Noëlle V. Schenk Orcid Logo, Caterina Penone Orcid Logo, Jan Thiele, Catrin Westphal, Eric Allan Orcid Logo, Manfred Ayasse, Nico Blüthgen Orcid Logo, Runa S. Boeddinghaus, Andrea Larissa Boesing Orcid Logo, Ralph Bolliger Orcid Logo, Verena Busch, Markus Fischer Orcid Logo, Martin M. Gossner Orcid Logo, Norbert Hölzel Orcid Logo, Kirsten Jung Orcid Logo, Ellen Kandeler Orcid Logo, Valentin H. Klaus Orcid Logo, Till Kleinebecker Orcid Logo, Sophia Leimer Orcid Logo, Sven Marhan, Kathryn Morris Orcid Logo, Sandra Müller Orcid Logo, Felix Neff Orcid Logo, Margot Neyret Orcid Logo, Yvonne Oelmann Orcid Logo, David J. Perović Orcid Logo, Sophie Peter Orcid Logo, Daniel Prati, Matthias C. Rillig, Hugo Saiz, Deborah Schäfer, Michael Scherer-Lorenzen Orcid Logo, Michael Schloter Orcid Logo, Ingo Schöning Orcid Logo, Marion Schrumpf Orcid Logo, Juliane Steckel, Ingolf Steffan-Dewenter, Marco Tschapka, Juliane Vogt, Christiane Weiner Orcid Logo, Wolfgang Weisser Orcid Logo, Konstans Wells Orcid Logo, Michael Werner Orcid Logo, Wolfgang Wilcke Orcid Logo, Peter Manning Orcid Logo

Nature Ecology and Evolution, Volume: 7

Swansea University Author: Konstans Wells Orcid Logo

Abstract

The impact of local biodiversity loss on ecosystem functioning is well established, but the role of larger-scale biodiversity dynamics in the delivery of ecosystem services remains poorly understood. Here we address this gap using a comprehensive dataset describing the supply of 16 cultural, regulat...

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Published in: Nature Ecology and Evolution
ISSN: 2397-334X
Published: Springer Science and Business Media LLC 2022
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Here we address this gap using a comprehensive dataset describing the supply of 16 cultural, regulating and provisioning ecosystem services in 150 European agricultural grassland plots, and detailed multi-scale data on land use and plant diversity. After controlling for land-use and abiotic factors, we show that both plot-level and surrounding plant diversity play an important role in the supply of cultural and aboveground regulating ecosystem services. In contrast, provisioning and belowground regulating ecosystem services are more strongly driven by field-level management and abiotic factors. Structural equation models revealed that surrounding plant diversity promotes ecosystem services both directly, probably by fostering the spill-over of ecosystem service providers from surrounding areas, and indirectly, by maintaining plot-level diversity. By influencing the ecosystem services that local stakeholders prioritized, biodiversity at different scales was also shown to positively influence a wide range of stakeholder groups. These results provide a comprehensive picture of which ecosystem services rely most strongly on biodiversity, and the respective scales of biodiversity that drive these services. This key information is required for the upscaling of biodiversity–ecosystem service relationships, and the informed management of biodiversity within agricultural landscapes.</abstract><type>Journal Article</type><journal>Nature Ecology and Evolution</journal><volume>7</volume><journalNumber/><paginationStart/><paginationEnd/><publisher>Springer Science and Business Media LLC</publisher><placeOfPublication/><isbnPrint/><isbnElectronic/><issnPrint/><issnElectronic>2397-334X</issnElectronic><keywords/><publishedDay>14</publishedDay><publishedMonth>11</publishedMonth><publishedYear>2022</publishedYear><publishedDate>2022-11-14</publishedDate><doi>10.1038/s41559-022-01918-5</doi><url/><notes/><college>COLLEGE NANME</college><department>Biosciences</department><CollegeCode>COLLEGE CODE</CollegeCode><DepartmentCode>SBI</DepartmentCode><institution>Swansea University</institution><apcterm/><funders>The work was partly funded by the DFG Priority Program 1374 ‘Biodiversity-Exploratories’ and by the Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung. C.W. is grateful for being funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG, Project number 493487387). E.K. is supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG, KA1590/8-5). H.S. is supported by a María Zambrano fellowship funded by the Ministry of Universities and European Union-Next Generation plan. M.M.G. acknowledges support from the Swiss National Science Foundation (grant number 310030E-173542). S.M. is supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG, MA4436/1-5). 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spelling v2 61917 2022-11-15 The supply of multiple ecosystem services requires biodiversity across spatial scales d18166c31e89833c55ef0f2cbb551243 0000-0003-0377-2463 Konstans Wells Konstans Wells true false 2022-11-15 SBI The impact of local biodiversity loss on ecosystem functioning is well established, but the role of larger-scale biodiversity dynamics in the delivery of ecosystem services remains poorly understood. Here we address this gap using a comprehensive dataset describing the supply of 16 cultural, regulating and provisioning ecosystem services in 150 European agricultural grassland plots, and detailed multi-scale data on land use and plant diversity. After controlling for land-use and abiotic factors, we show that both plot-level and surrounding plant diversity play an important role in the supply of cultural and aboveground regulating ecosystem services. In contrast, provisioning and belowground regulating ecosystem services are more strongly driven by field-level management and abiotic factors. Structural equation models revealed that surrounding plant diversity promotes ecosystem services both directly, probably by fostering the spill-over of ecosystem service providers from surrounding areas, and indirectly, by maintaining plot-level diversity. By influencing the ecosystem services that local stakeholders prioritized, biodiversity at different scales was also shown to positively influence a wide range of stakeholder groups. These results provide a comprehensive picture of which ecosystem services rely most strongly on biodiversity, and the respective scales of biodiversity that drive these services. This key information is required for the upscaling of biodiversity–ecosystem service relationships, and the informed management of biodiversity within agricultural landscapes. Journal Article Nature Ecology and Evolution 7 Springer Science and Business Media LLC 2397-334X 14 11 2022 2022-11-14 10.1038/s41559-022-01918-5 COLLEGE NANME Biosciences COLLEGE CODE SBI Swansea University The work was partly funded by the DFG Priority Program 1374 ‘Biodiversity-Exploratories’ and by the Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung. C.W. is grateful for being funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG, Project number 493487387). E.K. is supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG, KA1590/8-5). H.S. is supported by a María Zambrano fellowship funded by the Ministry of Universities and European Union-Next Generation plan. M.M.G. acknowledges support from the Swiss National Science Foundation (grant number 310030E-173542). S.M. is supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG, MA4436/1-5). P.M. acknowledges support from the German Research Foundation (DFG; MA 7144/1-1). 2023-06-12T16:47:20.7262449 2022-11-15T08:34:47.2534814 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Biosciences Gaëtane Le Provost 0000-0002-1643-6023 1 Noëlle V. Schenk 0000-0003-3240-1135 2 Caterina Penone 0000-0002-8170-6659 3 Jan Thiele 4 Catrin Westphal 5 Eric Allan 0000-0001-9641-9436 6 Manfred Ayasse 7 Nico Blüthgen 0000-0001-6349-4528 8 Runa S. Boeddinghaus 9 Andrea Larissa Boesing 0000-0002-7467-4281 10 Ralph Bolliger 0000-0001-5383-9713 11 Verena Busch 12 Markus Fischer 0000-0002-5589-5900 13 Martin M. Gossner 0000-0003-1516-6364 14 Norbert Hölzel 0000-0002-6367-3400 15 Kirsten Jung 0000-0002-9449-2215 16 Ellen Kandeler 0000-0002-2854-0012 17 Valentin H. Klaus 0000-0002-7469-6800 18 Till Kleinebecker 0000-0003-1121-2861 19 Sophia Leimer 0000-0001-6272-204x 20 Sven Marhan 21 Kathryn Morris 0000-0003-3548-444x 22 Sandra Müller 0000-0003-4289-755x 23 Felix Neff 0000-0001-7266-2589 24 Margot Neyret 0000-0001-9435-1634 25 Yvonne Oelmann 0000-0003-3513-6568 26 David J. Perović 0000-0002-7301-5591 27 Sophie Peter 0000-0002-5262-6780 28 Daniel Prati 29 Matthias C. Rillig 30 Hugo Saiz 31 Deborah Schäfer 32 Michael Scherer-Lorenzen 0000-0001-9566-590x 33 Michael Schloter 0000-0003-1671-1125 34 Ingo Schöning 0000-0002-9830-5026 35 Marion Schrumpf 0000-0003-4219-4125 36 Juliane Steckel 37 Ingolf Steffan-Dewenter 38 Marco Tschapka 39 Juliane Vogt 40 Christiane Weiner 0000-0003-4013-4663 41 Wolfgang Weisser 0000-0002-2757-8959 42 Konstans Wells 0000-0003-0377-2463 43 Michael Werner 0000-0002-1670-7137 44 Wolfgang Wilcke 0000-0002-6031-4613 45 Peter Manning 0000-0002-7940-2023 46 61917__25812__a1279517e13249cf8a641aa0a8707027.pdf LeProvost_etal_2022_NATECOLEVOL_author.version.pdf 2022-11-17T08:35:51.6568837 Output 1560281 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2023-05-14T00:00:00.0000000 true eng
title The supply of multiple ecosystem services requires biodiversity across spatial scales
spellingShingle The supply of multiple ecosystem services requires biodiversity across spatial scales
Konstans Wells
title_short The supply of multiple ecosystem services requires biodiversity across spatial scales
title_full The supply of multiple ecosystem services requires biodiversity across spatial scales
title_fullStr The supply of multiple ecosystem services requires biodiversity across spatial scales
title_full_unstemmed The supply of multiple ecosystem services requires biodiversity across spatial scales
title_sort The supply of multiple ecosystem services requires biodiversity across spatial scales
author_id_str_mv d18166c31e89833c55ef0f2cbb551243
author_id_fullname_str_mv d18166c31e89833c55ef0f2cbb551243_***_Konstans Wells
author Konstans Wells
author2 Gaëtane Le Provost
Noëlle V. Schenk
Caterina Penone
Jan Thiele
Catrin Westphal
Eric Allan
Manfred Ayasse
Nico Blüthgen
Runa S. Boeddinghaus
Andrea Larissa Boesing
Ralph Bolliger
Verena Busch
Markus Fischer
Martin M. Gossner
Norbert Hölzel
Kirsten Jung
Ellen Kandeler
Valentin H. Klaus
Till Kleinebecker
Sophia Leimer
Sven Marhan
Kathryn Morris
Sandra Müller
Felix Neff
Margot Neyret
Yvonne Oelmann
David J. Perović
Sophie Peter
Daniel Prati
Matthias C. Rillig
Hugo Saiz
Deborah Schäfer
Michael Scherer-Lorenzen
Michael Schloter
Ingo Schöning
Marion Schrumpf
Juliane Steckel
Ingolf Steffan-Dewenter
Marco Tschapka
Juliane Vogt
Christiane Weiner
Wolfgang Weisser
Konstans Wells
Michael Werner
Wolfgang Wilcke
Peter Manning
format Journal article
container_title Nature Ecology and Evolution
container_volume 7
publishDate 2022
institution Swansea University
issn 2397-334X
doi_str_mv 10.1038/s41559-022-01918-5
publisher Springer Science and Business Media LLC
college_str Faculty of Science and Engineering
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hierarchy_top_id facultyofscienceandengineering
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Science and Engineering
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofscienceandengineering
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Science and Engineering
department_str School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Biosciences{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Science and Engineering{{{_:::_}}}School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Biosciences
document_store_str 1
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description The impact of local biodiversity loss on ecosystem functioning is well established, but the role of larger-scale biodiversity dynamics in the delivery of ecosystem services remains poorly understood. Here we address this gap using a comprehensive dataset describing the supply of 16 cultural, regulating and provisioning ecosystem services in 150 European agricultural grassland plots, and detailed multi-scale data on land use and plant diversity. After controlling for land-use and abiotic factors, we show that both plot-level and surrounding plant diversity play an important role in the supply of cultural and aboveground regulating ecosystem services. In contrast, provisioning and belowground regulating ecosystem services are more strongly driven by field-level management and abiotic factors. Structural equation models revealed that surrounding plant diversity promotes ecosystem services both directly, probably by fostering the spill-over of ecosystem service providers from surrounding areas, and indirectly, by maintaining plot-level diversity. By influencing the ecosystem services that local stakeholders prioritized, biodiversity at different scales was also shown to positively influence a wide range of stakeholder groups. These results provide a comprehensive picture of which ecosystem services rely most strongly on biodiversity, and the respective scales of biodiversity that drive these services. This key information is required for the upscaling of biodiversity–ecosystem service relationships, and the informed management of biodiversity within agricultural landscapes.
published_date 2022-11-14T16:47:19Z
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