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Aboveground-belowground interactions drive the relationship between plant diversity and ecosystem function

Subject Area Ecology and Biodiversity of Plants and Ecosystems
Ecology and Biodiversity of Animals and Ecosystems, Organismic Interactions
Term from 2012 to 2021
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 220971425
 
The positive relationship between plant diversity and ecosystem functioning is likely to be co-determined by aboveground-belowground multitrophic interactions. Considering and manipulating such interactions thus is likely to significantly improve the mechanistic understanding of BEF relationships. The present proposal comprehensively investigates long-term (>4 years) plant diversity effects on soil microorganisms, nematodes and other soil invertebrates across different ecosystems (grassland and forest ecosystems) and global change contexts (elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations, N deposition, warming and drought) in order to extract general mechanisms. Complementary and well-directed laboratory experiments will be conducted to simulate soil feedback effects resulting from plant diversity-induced changes in soil food webs. This novel approach will allow investigating the balance between negative and positive soil feedback effects and the consequences for ecosystem functioning. This holistic knowledge of changes in and interactions of above- and belowground processes is crucial to predict the long-term consequences of plant community simplification for ecosystem functioning. Experimental work will be complemented with the meta-analysis of previous work in order to reconcile prior inconsistent findings. Collaborations with some of the world‘s leading international scientists in BEF research, at the TU München and the Helmholtz Zentrum München will yield unique mechanistic insights into the BEF relationship. The main task of the present proposal is to disentangle the driving forces of plant diversity effects on soil biota as well as subsequent positive and negative feedback effects on plants. In order to achieve this, the present project has four major goals:(i) Investigate long-term plant diversity effects on soil biota and functions across multiple settings in order to derive general conclusions(ii) Investigate the significance of plant diversity-induced positive and negative soil feedback effects on plant performance(iii) Investigate if anthropogenic stressor effects reinforce plant diversity effects on soil biota and subsequent soil feedback effects(iv) Synthesize results and perform meta-analyses in order to understand and reconcile inconsistent findings of previous studies on plant diversity effects on soil biota, and relate subsequent changes in soil food webs to alterations in ecosystem functioning.
DFG Programme Independent Junior Research Groups
 
 

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