Tree diversity increases productivity through enhancing structural complexity across mycorrhizal types

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Tree species diversity and mycorrhizal associations play a central role for forest productivity, but factors driving positive biodiversity-productivity relationships remain poorly understood. In a biodiversity experiment manipulating tree diversity and mycorrhizal associations, we examined the roles of above- and belowground processes in modulating wood productivity in young temperate tree communities and potential underlying mechanisms. We found that tree species richness, but not mycorrhizal associations, increased forest productivity by enhancing aboveground structural complexity within communities. Structurally complex communities were almost twice as productive as structurally simple stands, particularly when light interception was high. We further demonstrate that overyielding was largely explained by positive net biodiversity effects on structural complexity with functional variation in shade tolerance and taxonomic diversity being key drivers of structural complexity in mixtures. Consideration of stand structural complexity appears to be a crucial element in predicting carbon sequestration in the early successional stages of mixed-species forests.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbereadi2362
JournalScience Advances
Volume9
Issue number40
Number of pages11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 06.10.2023

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
We are grateful to A. Koller and L. Georgi for the assistance in data collection and to M. Ehbrecht and K. Friedrich Reich for the suggestions in data analysis. We are also thankful to N. Döring for the technical assistance. This study was supported by the International Research Training Group TreeDì jointly funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) 319936945/GRK2324 and the University of Chinese Academy of Sciences (UCAS). R.B. acknowledges support by the Saxon State Ministry for Science, Culture and Tourism (SMWK), Germany (3-7304/35/6-2021/48880). The Article Processing Charges (APCs) were funded by the joint publication funds of the TU Dresden, including Carl Gustav Carus Faculty of Medicine and the SLUB Dresden, as well as the Open Access Publication Funding of the DFG

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