植物史和土壤史对草地生态系统功能影响的实验研究。

IF 1.2 4区 综合性期刊 Q3 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
Anna-Maria Madaj, Yuanyuan Huang, Anne Ebeling, Lisa Ertel, Alban Gebler, Gerd Gleixner, Jes Hines, Christiane Roscher, Alexandra Weigelt, Cynthia Albracht, Angelos Amyntas, Leonardo Bassi, Ana Elizabeth Bonato Asato, Michael Bonkowski, Maximilian Bröcher, François Buscot, Francesca De Giorgi, Yuri Pinheiro Alves de Souza, Van Cong Doan, Walter Durka, Anna Heintz-Buschart, Justus Hennecke, Markus Lange, Pamela Medina-van Berkum, Sebastian Tobias Meyer, Sören Krawczyk, Akanksha Rai, Thomas Reitz, Christian Ristok, Stefan Scheu, Michael Schloter, Stefanie Schulz, Marcel Dominik Solbach, Sybille Barbara Unsicker, Nico Eisenhauer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

全球生物多样性的丧失促使许多研究通过实验改变植物物种丰富度并检查生态系统功能的后果。这类实验一般表明地上和地下生物多样性与陆地生态系统功能之间存在正相关关系。此外,随着时间的推移,这种关系趋于加强,被视为多样性植物群落功能的增强和低多样性植物群落功能的降低。高多样性与低多样性植物群落中多营养群落组装和生物相互作用的差异被假设通过改变消费群落结构和功能以及驱动植物群落中植物物种的可塑性或微进化反应来影响植物的性能。为了解决这种复杂的群落历史相互作用,我们将这些影响分为植物和土壤历史。植物历史是指植物对其群落中过去经历的非生物和生物选择压力的所有反应,而土壤历史涉及作为可变植物多样性下植物-土壤相互作用遗产而发展的所有非生物和生物土壤特性。为了验证生物多样性与生态系统功能关系的增强是由于土壤历史、植物历史还是两者的共同作用,我们在Ecotron(一个陆地中生态系统设施,可以控制地上和地下的环境条件)中建立了生物多样性实验。建立了由1、2、3和6种草地植物组成的植物多样性梯度,并对每个水平的植物物种丰富度进行了土壤史和植物史处理。具有代表性的结果表明,在Ecotron试验中成功建立了目标处理,观察了植物和土壤历史对植物初始发育和最终生长的影响。此外,我们还提供了单个响应变量数据分析的案例研究。我们概述了研究目标和方法,以全面评估对实验治疗的多功能反应,最终解决总体假设。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
JenaTron - An Experimental Approach to Study the Effects of Plant History and Soil History on Grassland Ecosystem Functioning.

The global loss of biodiversity has motivated many studies that experimentally vary plant species richness and examine the consequences for ecosystem functioning. Such experiments generally show a positive relationship between above- and below-ground biodiversity and the functioning of terrestrial ecosystems. Moreover, this relationship tends to strengthen over time, seen as enhanced functioning of diverse plant communities and reduced functioning of low-diversity plant communities. Differences in multitrophic community assembly and biotic interactions in high- versus low-diversity plant communities are hypothesized to affect plant performance by altering consumer community structure and function and driving plastic or micro-evolutionary responses of plant species in the plant communities. To resolve this complex interplay of community history, we separated these effects into plant and soil history. Plant history refers to all plant-level responses to past abiotic and biotic selection pressures experienced in their communities, while soil history relates to all abiotic and biotic soil properties developed as a legacy of plant-soil interactions under variable plant diversity. We set up a biodiversity experiment in an Ecotron, a terrestrial mesocosm facility that allows controlling environmental conditions above- and below-ground, to test whether the strengthening biodiversity-ecosystem functioning relationship is due to soil history, plant history, or a combination of both. We established a plant diversity gradient consisting of 1, 2, 3, and 6 grassland plant species and factorially nested with soil history and plant history treatments for each level of plant species richness. Representative results demonstrate the successful establishment of target treatments in the Ecotron experiment, observing the effects of plant and soil history on initial plant development and final plant growth. Additionally, we provide a case study for data analysis of individual response variables. We outline research objectives and methods to comprehensively assess the multifunctional responses to the experimental treatments necessary to ultimately address the overarching hypothesis.

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来源期刊
Jove-Journal of Visualized Experiments
Jove-Journal of Visualized Experiments MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES-
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
992
期刊介绍: JoVE, the Journal of Visualized Experiments, is the world''s first peer reviewed scientific video journal. Established in 2006, JoVE is devoted to publishing scientific research in a visual format to help researchers overcome two of the biggest challenges facing the scientific research community today; poor reproducibility and the time and labor intensive nature of learning new experimental techniques.
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