Journalartikel
Autorenliste: Ekschmitt, K; Klein, A; Pieper, B; Wolters, V
Jahr der Veröffentlichung: 2001
Seiten: 239-246
Zeitschrift: Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science
Bandnummer: 164
Heftnummer: 3
ISSN: 1436-8730
Open Access Status: Bronze
Verlag: Wiley-VCH Verlag
Abstract:
The paper gives an overview of ecological theories and hypotheses that have been raised in order to predict diversity-function relationships. In particular, those reasons are discussed that may explain the discrepancy between the theoretical expectation for widespread effects of diversity on functioning and the ambiguous empirical evidence for such effects. Structural differences in the ecology of plants, invertebrates, and micro-organisms are considered which lead to differences in diversity-function relationships among these groups of organisms. Four criteria are derived that determine diversity-function relationships: (1) motility of the organisms under consideration, (2) decoupling of population persistence and functional activity in these organisms, (3) species richness of the organisms' community, and (4) equilibrium stability of the considered ecological process. From these criteria the authors predict that measurable effects of diversity on functioning are (a) likely to be found in plants and in micro-organisms while they are (b) unlikely to be found in the soil fauna. They predict that diversity is (c) likely to affect primary production, soil energy turnover, and nutrient losses from the system, while it is (d) unlikely to durably influence litter decomposition rate. It is shown that these predictions are largely corroborated by empirical evidence compiled from the literature. The issue of spatial and temporal scale is briefly discussed.