loading page

The hidden role of multi-trophic interactions in driving diversity-productivity relationships
  • +2
  • Georg Albert,
  • Benoit Gauzens,
  • Michel Loreau,
  • Shaopeng Wang,
  • Ulrich Brose
Georg Albert
iDiv

Corresponding Author:georg.albert@idiv.de

Author Profile
Benoit Gauzens
iDiv
Author Profile
Michel Loreau
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
Author Profile
Shaopeng Wang
Peking University
Author Profile
Ulrich Brose
German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research Halle-Jena-Lepizig
Author Profile

Abstract

Resource-use complementarity of producer species is often invoked to explain their 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 analyzing diversity-productivity relationships in a simulation experiment of primary producer communities nested within complex food-webs, manipulating resource-use complementarity and multi-trophic animal richness. We show that both mechanisms' joint contribution to positive diversity-productivity relationships generally exceeds their individual effects, as both interactively create diverse communities of complementary producer species. Specifically, multi-trophic interactions in animal-rich ecosystems increase complementarity the most when resource-use complementarity is low. The interdependence of top-down and bottom-up forces in creating biodiversity-productivity relationships highlights the importance to adopt a more multi-trophic perspective on biodiversity-ecosystem functioning relationships.
Feb 2022Published in Ecology Letters volume 25 issue 2 on pages 405-415. 10.1111/ele.13935