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Human-driven environmental changes may simultaneously affect the biodiversity, productivity, and stability of Earth's ecosystems, but there is no consensus on the causal relationships linking these variables. Data from 12 multiyear experiments that manipulate important anthropogenic drivers, including plant diversity, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, fire, herbivory, and water, show that each driver influences ecosystem productivity. However, the stability of ecosystem productivity is only changed by those drivers that alter biodiversity, with a given decrease in plant species numbers leading to a quantitatively similar decrease in ecosystem stability regardless of which driver caused the biodiversity loss. These results suggest that changes in biodiversity caused by drivers of environmental change may be a major factor determining how global environmental changes affect ecosystem stability.
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Yann Hautier
Utrecht University
David Tilman
Smithsonian Institution
Forest Isbell
University of Minnesota
Science
University of Oxford
University of Minnesota
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Hautier et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d7629ef182769aa8b8aeb3 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aaa1788