4.7 Article

Key plant species and detritivores drive diversity effects on instream leaf litter decomposition more than functional diversity: A microcosm study

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 798, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.149266

Keywords

Alnus glutinosa; Biodiversity-ecosystem functioning; Complementarity and selection effects; Microbial; Net diversity effect; Leaf litter mixtures

Funding

  1. FEDER Operative Program Andalusia (RIOVEGEST project) [FEDER-UAL18-RNM-B006]
  2. Spanish Ministry for Science, Innovation and Universities
  3. FEDER (BioLoss project) [RTI2018-095023-B-I00]
  4. FPU grant of the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports [FPU16/03734]

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The study found that plant diversity has positive effects on detritivore-mediated decomposition, litter nutrient losses, and detritivore biomass, especially in the presence of a key species - alder. However, there were negative effects on microbially mediated processes and fungal biomass, indicating that plant diversity loss can slow down the decomposition process and affect stream ecosystem functioning.
Anthropogenic impacts on freshwater ecosystems cause critical losses of biodiversity that can in turn impair key processes such as decomposition and nutrient cycling. Forest streams are mainly subsidized by terrestrial organic detritus, so their functioning and conservation status can be altered by changes in forest biodiversity and composition, particularly if these changes involve the replacement of functional groups or the loss of key species. We examined this issue using a microcosm experiment where we manipulated plant functional diversity (FD) (monocultures and low-FD and high-FD mixtures, resulting from different combinations of deciduous and evergreen Quercus species) and the presence of a key species (Alnus glutinosa), all in presence and absence of detritivores, and assessed effects on litter decomposition, nutrient cycling, and fungal and detritivore biomass. We found (i) positive diversity effects on detritivore-mediated decomposition, litter nutrient losses and detritivore biomass exclusively when A. glutinosa was present; and (ii) negative effects on the same processes when microbially mediated and on fungal biomass. Most positive trends could be explained by the higher litter palatability and litter trait variability obtained with the inclusion of alder leaves in the mixture. Our results support the hypothesis of a consistent slowing down of the decomposition process as a result of plant biodiversity loss, and hence effects on stream ecosystem functioning, especially when a key (N -fixing) species is lost; and underscore the importance of detritivores as drivers of plant diversity effects in the studied ecosystem processes. (c) 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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