Abstract

Over the past several decades, a rapidly expanding field of research known as biodiversity and ecosystem functioning has begun to quantify how the world's biological diversity can, as an independent variable, control ecological processes that are both essential for, and fundamental to, the functioning of ecosystems. Research in this area has often been justified on grounds that (1) loss of biological diversity ranks among the most pronounced changes to the global environment and that (2) reductions in diversity, and corresponding changes in species composition, could alter important services that ecosystems provide to humanity (e.g., food production, pest/disease control, water purification). Here we review over two decades of experiments that have examined how species richness of primary producers influences the suite of ecological processes that are controlled by plants and algae in terrestrial, marine, and freshwater ecosystems. Using formal meta‐analyses, we assess the balance of evidence for eight fundamental questions and corresponding hypotheses about the functional role of producer diversity in ecosystems. These include questions about how primary producer diversity influences the efficiency of resource use and biomass production in ecosystems, how primary producer diversity influences the transfer and recycling of biomass to other trophic groups in a food web, and the number of species and spatial /temporal scales at which diversity effects are most apparent. After summarizing the balance of evidence and stating our own confidence in the conclusions, we outline several new questions that must now be addressed if this field is going to evolve into a predictive science that can help conserve and manage ecological processes in ecosystems.

Keywords

BiodiversityBiologyEcosystem diversityEcosystemEcologyTrophic levelSpecies richnessBiomass (ecology)Diversity (politics)Primary producersFood webEcosystem servicesConvention on Biological DiversityEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental science

MeSH Terms

BiodiversityDatabases as TopicFood ChainSpecies Specificity

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
2011
Type
review
Volume
98
Issue
3
Pages
572-592
Citations
1296
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1296
OpenAlex
57
Influential
1077
CrossRef

Cite This

Bradley J. Cardinale, Kristin L. Matulich, David U. Hooper et al. (2011). The functional role of producer diversity in ecosystems. American Journal of Botany , 98 (3) , 572-592. https://doi.org/10.3732/ajb.1000364

Identifiers

DOI
10.3732/ajb.1000364
PMID
21613148

Data Quality

Data completeness: 90%