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      Filter-feeders have differential bottom-up impacts on green and brown food webs

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          Partitioning selection and complementarity in biodiversity experiments.

          The impact of biodiversity loss on the functioning of ecosystems and their ability to provide ecological services has become a central issue in ecology. Several experiments have provided evidence that reduced species diversity may impair ecosystem processes such as plant biomass production. The interpretation of these experiments, however, has been controversial because two types of mechanism may operate in combination. In the 'selection effect', dominance by species with particular traits affects ecosystem processes. In the 'complementarity effect', resource partitioning or positive interactions lead to increased total resource use. Here we present a new approach to separate the two effects on the basis of an additive partitioning analogous to the Price equation in evolutionary genetics. Applying this method to data from the pan-European BIODEPTH experiment reveals that the selection effect is zero on average and varies from negative to positive in different localities, depending on whether species with lower- or higher-than-average biomass dominate communities. In contrast, the complementarity effect is positive overall, supporting the hypothesis that plant diversity influences primary production in European grasslands through niche differentiation or facilitation.
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            Nutrient co-limitation of primary producer communities.

            Synergistic interactions between multiple limiting resources are common, highlighting the importance of co-limitation as a constraint on primary production. Our concept of resource limitation has shifted over the past two decades from an earlier paradigm of single-resource limitation towards concepts of co-limitation by multiple resources, which are predicted by various theories. Herein, we summarise multiple-resource limitation responses in plant communities using a dataset of 641 studies that applied factorial addition of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) in freshwater, marine and terrestrial systems. We found that more than half of the studies displayed some type of synergistic response to N and P addition. We found support for strict definitions of co-limitation in 28% of the studies: i.e. community biomass responded to only combined N and P addition, or to both N and P when added separately. Our results highlight the importance of interactions between N and P in regulating primary producer community biomass and point to the need for future studies that address the multiple mechanisms that could lead to different types of co-limitation. © 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd/CNRS.
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              Vascular Plant Breakdown in Freshwater Ecosystems

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Oecologia
                Oecologia
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0029-8549
                1432-1939
                January 2021
                January 02 2021
                January 2021
                : 195
                : 1
                : 187-198
                Article
                10.1007/s00442-020-04821-7
                33389154
                0d13b0dd-7fd6-41cc-9eb3-5100fe7ceed8
                © 2021

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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