Biodiversity research
has undergone major changes over the past decade and a half, with a boom in
experiments investigating the link between the diversity of organisms and
ecosystem processes and functioning. The main approach in such experiments is
to create a gradient of plant diversity, by randomly selecting species for the
mixtures from a species pool. As a consequence, although the species pool is
based on natural assemblages of plant species from a given habitat, the actual
assemblages created in such an approach usually have no exact natural
correlate. In essence one deconstructs
and then reconstructs nature. In
restoration projects on the other hand, humans change abiotic conditions and try
to establish desired species in degraded ecosystems - they reconstruct nature. This talk explores the vast potential for cross
fertilization between these two fields of biodiversity and restoration
research. Biodiversity experiments can tell us how well a system is able to
provide certain ecosystem services such as nutrient cycling or decomposition). In
addition they can provide an idea of a minimum number of necessary species for
a system to be able to function, given certain environmental conditions. All
ecosystems in a modern landscape can be seen as biogeochemical systems somewhere
along a continuum: from a balanced relationship between biodiversity and
ecosystem functioning to a malfunctioning relationship. One main goal of
restoration could therefore be to restore the system back to a functioning
relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Now we need to
assess how applicable the results from biodiversity experiments are under more
natural also under more extreme conditions, such as those often encountered in
restoration projects. I discuss new experiments testing positive biodiversity
effects as found in experiments, in controlled as well as restoration-relevant
settings.