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Diversifying livestock promotes multidiversity and multifunctionality in managed grasslands
Author(s) -
Ling Wang,
Manuel DelgadoBaquerizo,
Deli Wang,
Forest Isbell,
Jun Liu,
Chao Feng,
Jushan Liu,
Zhiwei Zhong,
Hui Zhu,
Xia Yuan,
Qing Chang,
Chen Liu
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.1807354116
Subject(s) - livestock , ecosystem , biodiversity , ecosystem services , diversification (marketing strategy) , herbivore , ecology , biomass (ecology) , agroforestry , grazing , grassland , abundance (ecology) , ecosystem diversity , ecological stability , biology , business , marketing
Increasing plant diversity can increase ecosystem functioning, stability, and services in both natural and managed grasslands, but the effects of herbivore diversity, and especially of livestock diversity, remain underexplored. Given that managed grazing is the most extensive land use worldwide, and that land managers can readily change livestock diversity, we experimentally tested how livestock diversification (sheep, cattle, or both) influenced multidiversity (the diversity of plants, insects, soil microbes, and nematodes) and ecosystem multifunctionality (including plant biomass production, plant leaf N and P, above-ground insect abundance, nutrient cycling, soil C stocks, water regulation, and plant-microbe symbiosis) in the world's largest remaining grassland. We also considered the potential dependence of ecosystem multifunctionality on multidiversity. We found that livestock diversification substantially increased ecosystem multifunctionality by increasing multidiversity. The link between multidiversity and ecosystem multifunctionality was always stronger than the link between single diversity components and functions. Our work provides insights into the importance of multitrophic diversity to maintain multifunctionality in managed ecosystems and suggests that diversifying livestock could promote both multidiversity and ecosystem multifunctionality in an increasingly managed world.

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