作者
Yuanyuan Huang,Yuxin Chen,Nadia Castro‐Izaguirre,Martín Baruffol,Matteo Brezzi,Anne C. Lang,Ying Li,Werner Härdtle,Goddert von Oheimb,Xuefei Yang,Xiaojuan Liu,Kequan Pei,Sabine Both,Bo Yang,David Eichenberg,Thorsten Aßmann,Jürgen Bauhus,Thorsten Behrens,François Buscot,Xiaoyong Chen,Douglas Chesters,Bing-Yang Ding,Walter Durka,Alexandra Erfmeier,Jingyun Fang,Markus Fischer,Liang‐Dong Guo,Dali Guo,Jessica Gutknecht,Jin He,Chun-Ling He,Andy Hector,Lydia Hönig,Ren-Yong Hu,Alexandra‐Maria Klein,Peter Kühn,Yu Liang,Shan Li,Stefan G. Michalski,Michael Scherer‐Lorenzen,Karsten Schmidt,Thomas Scholten,Andreas Schuldt,Xuezheng Shi,Man-Zhi Tan,Zhiyao Tang,Stefan Trogisch,Zhengwen Wang,Erik Welk,Christian Wirth,Tesfaye Wubet,Wenhua Xiang,Mingjian Yu,Xiao-Dong Yu,Jia‐Yong Zhang,Shouren Zhang,Naili Zhang,Hong-Zhang Zhou,Chao-Dong Zhu,Li Zhu,Helge Bruelheide,Keping Ma,Pascal A. Niklaus,Bernhard Schmid
摘要
Tree diversity improves forest productivity Experimental studies in grasslands have shown that the loss of species has negative consequences for ecosystem functioning. Is the same true for forests? Huang et al. report the first results from a large biodiversity experiment in a subtropical forest in China. The study combines many replicates, realistic tree densities, and large plot sizes with a wide range of species richness levels. After 8 years of the experiment, the findings suggest strong positive effects of tree diversity on forest productivity and carbon accumulation. Thus, changing from monocultures to more mixed forests could benefit both restoration of biodiversity and mitigation of climate change. Science , this issue p. 80