COS 106-2 - Predicting non-additive effects of species diversity on decomposition using functional traits based on litter chemistry

Thursday, August 6, 2009: 1:50 PM
Sendero Blrm I, Hyatt
Courtney L. Meier, National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON), Boulder, CO and William D. Bowman, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO
Background/Question/Methods Biodiversity can strongly influence below-ground ecosystem function, and diverse plant litter mixtures frequently decompose substantially differently than expected, based on the average of individual component species. These strong “non-additive” effects constitute an important and poorly understood way in which diversity influences key decomposition processes like soil C and N cycling. However, it remains unclear how to predict non-additive diversity effects on decomposition. We mixed soils with litter from four alpine plant species in all possible species combinations, and we used 9 chemical traits to calculate the functional composition and functional diversity of the litter mixtures. We measured soil respiration, N mineralization, and microbial biomass N responses to the litter mixtures, and we observed strong non-additive effects of species diversity on soil C and N cycling.

Results/Conclusions Here we show that non-additive diversity effects on soil C and N cycling can be mechanistically predicted by defining plant litter inputs to soil in terms of functional chemical composition and functional chemical diversity. We found that the composition of litter chemical traits, and the ability to account for interactions among specific groups of chemical traits, was critical to predicting non-additive soil respiration (R2=0.33) and N mineralization (R2=0.52) responses to species diversity. In contrast, traditional litter chemistry metrics (e.g. %N, C:N, phenolic:N and lignin:N ratios) did not correlate well with non-additive soil C and N cycling rates (R2<0.1 for these measures of litter chemistry). We also found that effects of species richness on non-additive soil processes were likely explained by underlying changes in litter chemical diversity, and that increasing litter chemical diversity facilitates strong interactions among functional groups of compounds. These observations indicate functional chemical traits and their diversity may help explain apparently stochastic species diversity effects on non-additive decomposition processes.

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