Abstract
The sustainable delivery of multiple ecosystem services requires the management
of functionally diverse biological communities. In an agricultural context, an emphasis
on food production has often led to a loss of biodiversity to the detriment of other ecosystem
services such as the maintenance of soil health and pest regulation. In scenarios where multiple
species can be grown together, it may be possible to better balance environmental and
agronomic services through the targeted selection of companion species. We used the case
study of legume-based cover crops to engineer a plant community that delivered the optimal
balance of six ecosystem services: early productivity, regrowth following mowing, weed
suppression, support of invertebrates, soil fertility building (measured as yield of following
crop), and conservation of nutrients in the soil. An experimental species pool of 12 cultivated
legume species was screened for a range of functional traits and ecosystem services at five sites
across a geographical gradient in the United Kingdom. All possible species combinations were
then analyzed, using a process-based model of plant competition, to identify the community
that delivered the best balance of services at each site. In our system, low to intermediate levels
of species richness (one to four species) that exploited functional contrasts in growth habit and
phenology were identified as being optimal. The optimal solution was determined largely by
the number of species and functional diversity represented by the starting species pool,
emphasizing the importance of the initial selection of species for the screening experiments.
The approach of using relationships between functional traits and ecosystem services to design
multifunctional biological communities has the potential to inform the design of agricultural
systems that better balance agronomic and environmental services and meet the current
objective of European agricultural policy to maintain viable food production in the context of
the sustainable management of natural resources.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1034 - 1043 |
Number of pages | 10 |
Journal | Ecological Applications |
Volume | 25 |
Issue number | 4 |
Early online date | 1 Jun 2015 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Print publication - 1 Jun 2015 |
Bibliographical note
1023344Keywords
- Competition model
- Cover crops
- Functional traits
- Legumes
- Soil fertility
- Weeds
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Data from: Engineering a plant community to deliver multiple ecosystem services
Storkey, J. (Creator), Döring, T. (Creator), Baddeley, J. (Creator), Collins, R. (Creator), Roderick, S. (Creator), Jones, H. (Creator) & Watson, C. (Creator), Dryad, 20 Dec 2014
DOI: 10.5061/dryad.qj3mg, https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.qj3mg
Dataset