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Complementarity among species in horizontal versus vertical rooting space
Authors:von Felten  Stefanie; Schmid  Bernhard
Institution:1 Institute of Environmental Sciences, University of Zurich, 8057 Zurich, Switzerland
2 Institute of Plant Sciences, ETH Zurich, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland
Abstract:Aims: Many experiments have shown a positive effect of species richnesson productivity in grassland plant communities. However, itis poorly understood how environmental conditions affect thisrelationship. We aimed to test whether deep soil and limitingnutrient conditions increase the complementarity effect (CE)of species richness due to enhanced potential for resource partitioning. Methods: We grew monocultures and mixtures of four common grassland speciesin pots on shallow and deep soil, factorially combined withtwo nutrient levels. Soil volume was kept constant to avoidconfounding soil depth and volume. Using an additive partitioningmethod, we separated biodiversity effects on plant productivityinto components due to species complementarity and dominance. Important findings: Net biodiversity and complementarity effects were consistentlyhigher in shallow pots, which was unexpected, and at the lownutrient level. These two results suggest that although belowgroundpartitioning of resources was important, especially under lownutrient conditions, it was not due to differences in rootingdepths. We conclude that in our experiment (i) horizontal rootsegregation might have been more important than the partitioningof rooting depths and (ii) that the positive effects of deepsoil found in other studies were due to the combination of deepersoil with larger soil volume.
Keywords:biodiversity effects  nutrient limitation  resource partitioning  root competition  soil depth
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