Plant diversity enhances productivity and soil carbon storage

Shiping Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Wantong Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Wenting Xu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yang Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hongwei Wan(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Dima Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhiyao Tang(Peking University), Xuli Tang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Guoyi Zhou(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zongqiang Xie(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Daowei Zhou(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhouping Shangguan(Institute of Soil and Water Conservation), Jianhui Huang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jin He(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yanfen Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jiandong Sheng(Xinjiang Agricultural University), Lisong Tang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xinrong Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ming Dong(Hangzhou Normal University), Yan Wu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qiufeng Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhiheng Wang(Peking University), Jianguo Wu(Beijing Normal University), F. Stuart Chapin(University of Alaska Fairbanks), Yongfei Bai(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
April 16, 2018
Cited by 726Open Access
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Abstract

Despite evidence from experimental grasslands that plant diversity increases biomass production and soil organic carbon (SOC) storage, it remains unclear whether this is true in natural ecosystems, especially under climatic variations and human disturbances. Based on field observations from 6,098 forest, shrubland, and grassland sites across China and predictions from an integrative model combining multiple theories, we systematically examined the direct effects of climate, soils, and human impacts on SOC storage versus the indirect effects mediated by species richness (SR), aboveground net primary productivity (ANPP), and belowground biomass (BB). We found that favorable climates (high temperature and precipitation) had a consistent negative effect on SOC storage in forests and shrublands, but not in grasslands. Climate favorability, particularly high precipitation, was associated with both higher SR and higher BB, which had consistent positive effects on SOC storage, thus offsetting the direct negative effect of favorable climate on SOC. The indirect effects of climate on SOC storage depended on the relationships of SR with ANPP and BB, which were consistently positive in all biome types. In addition, human disturbance and soil pH had both direct and indirect effects on SOC storage, with the indirect effects mediated by changes in SR, ANPP, and BB. High soil pH had a consistently negative effect on SOC storage. Our findings have important implications for improving global carbon cycling models and ecosystem management: Maintaining high levels of diversity can enhance soil carbon sequestration and help sustain the benefits of plant diversity and productivity.


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