Repository logoRepository logo
GRO
  • GRO.data
  • GRO.plan
Help
  • English
  • Deutsch
Log In
New user? Click here to register.Have you forgotten your password?
Publications
Researcher
Organizations
Other
  • Journals
  • Series
  • Events
  • Projects
  • Working Groups

Browsing by Author "Perring, Michael P."

Filter results by typing the first few letters
Now showing 1 - 15 of 15
  • Results Per Page
  • Sort Options
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Combining Biodiversity Resurveys across Regions to Advance Global Change Research
    (2016)
    Verheyen, Kris
    ;
    De Frenne, Pieter
    ;
    Baeten, Lander
    ;
    Waller, Donald M.
    ;
    Hédl, Radim
    ;
    Perring, Michael P.
    ;
    Blondeel, Haben
    ;
    Brunet, Jörg
    ;
    Chudomelová, Markéta
    ;
    Decocq, Guillaume
    ;
    De Lombaerde, Emiel
    ;
    Depauw, Leen
    ;
    Dirnböck, Thomas
    ;
    Durak, Tomasz
    ;
    Eriksson, Ove
    ;
    Gilliam, Frank S.
    ;
    Heinken, Thilo
    ;
    Heinrichs, Steffi  
    ;
    Hermy, Martin
    ;
    Jaroszewicz, Bogdan
    ;
    Jenkins, Michael A.
    ;
    Johnson, Sarah E.
    ;
    Kirby, Keith J.
    ;
    Kopecký, Martin
    ;
    Landuyt, Dries
    ;
    Lenoir, Jonathan
    ;
    Li, Daijiang
    ;
    Macek, Martin
    ;
    Maes, Sybryn L.
    ;
    Máliš, František
    ;
    Mitchell, Fraser J. G.
    ;
    Naaf, Tobias
    ;
    Peterken, George
    ;
    Petřík, Petr
    ;
    Reczyńska, Kamila
    ;
    Rogers, David A.
    ;
    Schei, Fride HØistad
    ;
    Schmidt, Wolfgang
    ;
    Standovár, Tibor
    ;
    Świerkosz, Krzysztof
    ;
    Ujházy, Karol
    ;
    Van Calster, Hans
    ;
    Vellend, Mark
    ;
    Vild, Ondřej
    ;
    Woods, Kerry
    ;
    Wulf, Monika
    ;
    Bernhardt-Römermann, Markus
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Combining multiple investigative approaches to unravel functional responses to global change in the understorey of temperate forests
    (2023)
    Landuyt, Dries
    ;
    Perring, Michael P.
    ;
    Blondeel, Haben
    ;
    De Lombaerde, Emiel
    ;
    Depauw, Leen
    ;
    Lorer, Eline
    ;
    Maes, Sybryn L.
    ;
    Baeten, Lander
    ;
    Bergès, Laurent
    ;
    Bernhardt‐Römermann, Markus
    ;
    Verheyen, Kris
    Abstract Plant communities are being exposed to changing environmental conditions all around the globe, leading to alterations in plant diversity, community composition, and ecosystem functioning. For herbaceous understorey communities in temperate forests, responses to global change are postulated to be complex, due to the presence of a tree layer that modulates understorey responses to external pressures such as climate change and changes in atmospheric nitrogen deposition rates. Multiple investigative approaches have been put forward as tools to detect, quantify and predict understorey responses to these global‐change drivers, including, among others, distributed resurvey studies and manipulative experiments. These investigative approaches are generally designed and reported upon in isolation, while integration across investigative approaches is rarely considered. In this study, we integrate three investigative approaches (two complementary resurvey approaches and one experimental approach) to investigate how climate warming and changes in nitrogen deposition affect the functional composition of the understorey and how functional responses in the understorey are modulated by canopy disturbance, that is, changes in overstorey canopy openness over time. Our resurvey data reveal that most changes in understorey functional characteristics represent responses to changes in canopy openness with shifts in macroclimate temperature and aerial nitrogen deposition playing secondary roles. Contrary to expectations, we found little evidence that these drivers interact. In addition, experimental findings deviated from the observational findings, suggesting that the forces driving understorey change at the regional scale differ from those driving change at the forest floor (i.e., the experimental treatments). Our study demonstrates that different approaches need to be integrated to acquire a full picture of how understorey communities respond to global change.
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Drivers of above‐ground understorey biomass and nutrient stocks in temperate deciduous forests
    (2019)
    Landuyt, Dries
    ;
    Maes, Sybryn L.
    ;
    Depauw, Leen
    ;
    Ampoorter, Evy
    ;
    Blondeel, Haben
    ;
    Perring, Michael P.
    ;
    Brūmelis, Guntis
    ;
    Brunet, Jörg
    ;
    Decocq, Guillaume
    ;
    Ouden, Jan
    ;
    Härdtle, Werner
    ;
    Hédl, Radim
    ;
    Heinken, Thilo
    ;
    Heinrichs, Steffi  
    ;
    Jaroszewicz, Bogdan
    ;
    Kirby, Keith J.
    ;
    Kopecký, Martin
    ;
    Máliš, František
    ;
    Wulf, Monika
    ;
    Verheyen, Kris
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Effects of plant diversity on productivity strengthen over time due to trait-dependent shifts in species overyielding
    (2024)
    Zheng, Liting
    ;
    Barry, Kathryn E.
    ;
    Guerrero-Ramírez, Nathaly R.
    ;
    Craven, Dylan
    ;
    Reich, Peter B.
    ;
    Verheyen, Kris
    ;
    Scherer-Lorenzen, Michael
    ;
    Eisenhauer, Nico
    ;
    Barsoum, Nadia
    ;
    Bauhus, Jürgen
    ;
    Bruelheide, Helge
    ;
    Cavender-Bares, Jeannine
    ;
    Dolezal, Jiri
    ;
    Auge, Harald
    ;
    Fagundes, Marina V.
    ;
    Ferlian, Olga
    ;
    Fiedler, Sebastian  
    ;
    Forrester, David I.
    ;
    Ganade, Gislene
    ;
    Gebauer, Tobias
    ;
    Haase, Josephine
    ;
    Hajek, Peter
    ;
    Hector, Andy
    ;
    Hérault, Bruno
    ;
    Hölscher, Dirk
    ;
    Hulvey, Kristin B.
    ;
    Irawan, Bambang
    ;
    Jactel, Hervé
    ;
    Koricheva, Julia
    ;
    Kreft, Holger
    ;
    Lanta, Vojtech
    ;
    Leps, Jan
    ;
    Mereu, Simone
    ;
    Messier, Christian
    ;
    Montagnini, Florencia
    ;
    Mörsdorf, Martin
    ;
    Müller, Sandra
    ;
    Muys, Bart
    ;
    Nock, Charles A.
    ;
    Paquette, Alain
    ;
    Parker, William C.
    ;
    Parker, John D.
    ;
    Parrotta, John A.
    ;
    Paterno, Gustavo B.
    ;
    Perring, Michael P.
    ;
    Piotto, Daniel
    ;
    Wayne Polley, H.
    ;
    Ponette, Quentin
    ;
    Potvin, Catherine
    ;
    Quosh, Julius
    ;
    Rewald, Boris
    ;
    Godbold, Douglas L.
    ;
    van Ruijven, Jasper
    ;
    Standish, Rachel J.
    ;
    Stefanski, Artur
    ;
    Sundawati, Leti
    ;
    Urgoiti, Jon
    ;
    Williams, Laura J.
    ;
    Wilsey, Brian J.
    ;
    Yang, Baiyu
    ;
    Zhang, Li
    ;
    Zhao, Zhao
    ;
    Yang, Yongchuan
    ;
    Sandén, Hans
    ;
    Ebeling, Anne
    ;
    Schmid, Bernhard
    ;
    Fischer, Markus
    ;
    Kotowska, Martyna M.
    ;
    Palmborg, Cecilia
    ;
    Tilman, David
    ;
    Yan, Enrong
    ;
    Hautier, Yann
    Plant diversity effects on community productivity often increase over time. Whether the strengthening of diversity effects is caused by temporal shifts in species-level overyielding (i.e., higher species-level productivity in diverse communities compared with monocultures) remains unclear. Here, using data from 65 grassland and forest biodiversity experiments, we show that the temporal strength of diversity effects at the community scale is underpinned by temporal changes in the species that yield. These temporal trends of species-level overyielding are shaped by plant ecological strategies, which can be quantitatively delimited by functional traits. In grasslands, the temporal strengthening of biodiversity effects on community productivity was associated with increasing biomass overyielding of resource-conservative species increasing over time, and with overyielding of species characterized by fast resource acquisition either decreasing or increasing. In forests, temporal trends in species overyielding differ when considering above- versus belowground resource acquisition strategies. Overyielding in stem growth decreased for species with high light capture capacity but increased for those with high soil resource acquisition capacity. Our results imply that a diversity of species with different, and potentially complementary, ecological strategies is beneficial for maintaining community productivity over time in both grassland and forest ecosystems.
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Environmental drivers interactively affect individual tree growth across temperate European forests
    (2018)
    Maes, Sybryn L.
    ;
    Perring, Michael P.
    ;
    Vanhellemont, Margot
    ;
    Depauw, Leen
    ;
    Van den Bulcke, Jan
    ;
    Brūmelis, Guntis
    ;
    Brunet, Jörg
    ;
    Decocq, Guillaume
    ;
    den Ouden, Jan
    ;
    Härdtle, Werner
    ;
    Hédl, Radim
    ;
    Heinken, Thilo
    ;
    Heinrichs, Steffi  
    ;
    Jaroszewicz, Bogdan
    ;
    Kopecký, Martin
    ;
    Máliš, František
    ;
    Wulf, Monika
    ;
    Verheyen, Kris
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Evaluating structural and compositional canopy characteristics to predict the light‐demand signature of the forest understorey in mixed, semi‐natural temperate forests
    (2020)
    Depauw, Leen
    ;
    Perring, Michael P.
    ;
    Landuyt, Dries
    ;
    Maes, Sybryn L.
    ;
    Blondeel, Haben
    ;
    De Lombaerde, Emiel
    ;
    Brūmelis, Guntis
    ;
    Brunet, Jörg
    ;
    Closset‐Kopp, Déborah
    ;
    Decocq, Guillaume
    ;
    Den Ouden, Jan
    ;
    Härdtle, Werner
    ;
    Hédl, Radim
    ;
    Heinken, Thilo
    ;
    Heinrichs, Steffi  
    ;
    Jaroszewicz, Bogdan
    ;
    Kopecký, Martin
    ;
    Liepiņa, Ilze
    ;
    Macek, Martin
    ;
    Máliš, František
    ;
    Schmidt, Wolfgang  
    ;
    Smart, Simon M.
    ;
    Ujházy, Karol
    ;
    Wulf, Monika
    ;
    Verheyen, Kris
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    For the sake of resilience and multifunctionality, let's diversify planted forests!
    (2021-07-16)
    Messier, Christian
    ;
    Bauhus, Jürgen
    ;
    Sousa‐Silva, Rita
    ;
    Auge, Harald
    ;
    Baeten, Lander
    ;
    Barsoum, Nadia
    ;
    Bruelheide, Helge
    ;
    Caldwell, Benjamin
    ;
    Cavender‐Bares, Jeannine
    ;
    Dhiedt, Els
    ;
    Eisenhauer, Nico  
    ;
    Ganade, Gislene
    ;
    Gravel, Dominique
    ;
    Guillemot, Joannès
    ;
    Hall, Jefferson S.
    ;
    Hector, Andrew
    ;
    Hérault, Bruno
    ;
    Jactel, Hervé
    ;
    Koricheva, Julia
    ;
    Kreft, Holger  
    ;
    Mereu, Simone
    ;
    Muys, Bart
    ;
    Nock, Charles A.
    ;
    Paquette, Alain
    ;
    Parker, John D.
    ;
    Perring, Michael P.
    ;
    Ponette, Quentin
    ;
    Potvin, Catherine
    ;
    Reich, Peter B.
    ;
    Scherer‐Lorenzen, Michael
    ;
    Schnabel, Florian
    ;
    Verheyen, Kris
    ;
    Weih, Martin
    ;
    Wollni, Meike  
    ;
    Zemp, Delphine Clara
    ;
    Messier, Christian;
    ;
    Bauhus, Jürgen;
    ;
    Sousa‐Silva, Rita;
    ;
    Auge, Harald;
    ;
    Baeten, Lander;
    ;
    Barsoum, Nadia;
    ;
    Bruelheide, Helge;
    ;
    Caldwell, Benjamin;
    ;
    Cavender‐Bares, Jeannine;
    ;
    Dhiedt, Els;
    ;
    Eisenhauer, Nico;
    ;
    Ganade, Gislene;
    ;
    Gravel, Dominique;
    ;
    Guillemot, Joannès;
    ;
    Hall, Jefferson S.;
    ;
    Hector, Andrew;
    ;
    Hérault, Bruno;
    ;
    Jactel, Hervé;
    ;
    Koricheva, Julia;
    ;
    Kreft, Holger;
    ;
    Mereu, Simone;
    ;
    Muys, Bart;
    ;
    Nock, Charles A.;
    ;
    Paquette, Alain;
    ;
    Parker, John D.;
    ;
    Perring, Michael P.;
    ;
    Ponette, Quentin;
    ;
    Potvin, Catherine;
    ;
    Reich, Peter B.;
    ;
    Scherer‐Lorenzen, Michael;
    ;
    Schnabel, Florian;
    ;
    Verheyen, Kris;
    ;
    Weih, Martin;
    ;
    Wollni, Meike;
    ;
    Zemp, Delphine Clara;
    As of 2020, the world has an estimated 290 million ha of planted forests and this number is continuously increasing. Of these, 131 million ha are monospecific planted forests under intensive management. Although monospecific planted forests are important in providing timber, they harbor less biodiversity and are potentially more susceptible to disturbances than natural or diverse planted forests. Here, we point out the increasing scientific evidence for increased resilience and ecosystem service provision of functionally and species diverse planted forests (hereafter referred to as diverse planted forests) compared to monospecific ones. Furthermore, we propose five concrete steps to foster the adoption of diverse planted forests: (1) improve awareness of benefits and practical options of diverse planted forests among land-owners, managers, and investors; (2) incentivize tree species diversity in public funding of afforestation and programs to diversify current maladapted planted forests of low diversity; (3) develop new wood-based products that can be derived from many different tree species not yet in use; (4) invest in research to assess landscape benefits of diverse planted forests for functional connectivity and resilience to global-change threats; and (5) improve the evidence base on diverse planted forests, in particular in currently under-represented regions, where new options could be tested.
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Global environmental change effects on plant community composition trajectories depend upon management legacies
    (2018)
    Perring, Michael P.
    ;
    Bernhardt-Römermann, Markus
    ;
    Baeten, Lander
    ;
    Midolo, Gabriele
    ;
    Blondeel, Haben
    ;
    Depauw, Leen
    ;
    Landuyt, Dries
    ;
    Maes, Sybryn L.
    ;
    De Lombaerde, Emiel
    ;
    Carón, Maria Mercedes
    ;
    Vellend, Mark
    ;
    Brunet, Jörg
    ;
    Chudomelová, Markéta
    ;
    Decocq, Guillaume
    ;
    Diekmann, Martin
    ;
    Dirnböck, Thomas
    ;
    Dörfler, Inken
    ;
    Durak, Tomasz
    ;
    De Frenne, Pieter
    ;
    Gilliam, Frank S.
    ;
    Hédl, Radim
    ;
    Heinken, Thilo
    ;
    Hommel, Patrick
    ;
    Jaroszewicz, Bogdan
    ;
    Kirby, Keith J.
    ;
    Kopecký, Martin
    ;
    Lenoir, Jonathan
    ;
    Li, Daijiang
    ;
    Máliš, František
    ;
    Mitchell, Fraser J.G.
    ;
    Naaf, Tobias
    ;
    Newman, Miles
    ;
    Petřík, Petr
    ;
    Reczyńska, Kamila
    ;
    Schmidt, Wolfgang
    ;
    Standovár, Tibor
    ;
    Świerkosz, Krzysztof
    ;
    Van Calster, Hans
    ;
    Vild, Ondřej
    ;
    Wagner, Eva Rosa
    ;
    Wulf, Monika
    ;
    Verheyen, Kris
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Integrating trait-based empirical and modeling research to improve ecological restoration
    (2018-06)
    Fiedler, Sebastian  
    ;
    Perring, Michael P.
    ;
    Tietjen, Britta
    A global ecological restoration agenda has led to ambitious programs in environmental policy to mitigate declines in biodiversity and ecosystem services. Current restoration programs can incompletely return desired ecosystem service levels, while resilience of restored ecosystems to future threats is unknown. It is therefore essential to advance understanding and better utilize knowledge from ecological literature in restoration approaches. We identified an incomplete linkage between global change ecology, ecosystem function research, and restoration ecology. This gap impedes a full understanding of the interactive effects of changing environmental factors on the long-term provision of ecosystem functions and a quantification of trade-offs and synergies among multiple services. Approaches that account for the effects of multiple changing factors on the composition of plant traits and their direct and indirect impact on the provision of ecosystem functions and services can close this gap. However, studies on this multilayered relationship are currently missing. We therefore propose an integrated restoration agenda complementing trait-based empirical studies with simulation modeling. We introduce an ongoing case study to demonstrate how this framework could allow systematic assessment of the impacts of interacting environmental factors on long-term service provisioning. Our proposed agenda will benefit restoration programs by suggesting plant species compositions with specific traits that maximize the supply of multiple ecosystem services in the long term. Once the suggested compositions have been implemented in actual restoration projects, these assemblages should be monitored to assess whether they are resilient as well as to improve model parameterization. Additionally, the integration of empirical and simulation modeling research can improve global outcomes by raising the awareness of which restoration goals can be achieved, due to the quantification of trade-offs and synergies among ecosystem services under a wide range of environmental conditions.
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Light availability and land‐use history drive biodiversity and functional changes in forest herb layer communities
    (2020)
    Depauw, Leen
    ;
    Perring, Michael P.
    ;
    Landuyt, Dries
    ;
    Maes, Sybryn L.
    ;
    Blondeel, Haben
    ;
    De Lombaerde, Emiel
    ;
    Brūmelis, Guntis
    ;
    Brunet, Jörg
    ;
    Closset‐Kopp, Déborah
    ;
    Czerepko, Janusz
    ;
    Decocq, Guillaume
    ;
    den Ouden, Jan
    ;
    Gawryś, Radosław
    ;
    Härdtle, Werner
    ;
    Hédl, Radim
    ;
    Heinken, Thilo
    ;
    Heinrichs, Steffi  
    ;
    Jaroszewicz, Bogdan
    ;
    Kopecký, Martin
    ;
    Liepiņa, Ilze
    ;
    Macek, Martin
    ;
    Máliš, František
    ;
    Schmidt, Wolfgang  
    ;
    Smart, Simon M.
    ;
    Ujházy, Karol
    ;
    Wulf, Monika
    ;
    Verheyen, Kris
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Litter quality, land-use history, and nitrogen deposition effects on topsoil conditions across European temperate deciduous forests
    (2019)
    Maes, Sybryn L.
    ;
    Blondeel, Haben
    ;
    Perring, Michael P.
    ;
    Depauw, Leen
    ;
    Brūmelis, Guntis
    ;
    Brunet, Jörg
    ;
    Decocq, Guillaume
    ;
    den Ouden, Jan
    ;
    Härdtle, Werner
    ;
    Hedl, Radim
    ;
    Heinken, Thilo
    ;
    Heinrichs, Steffi  
    ;
    Jaroszewicz, Bogdan
    ;
    Kirby, Keith J.
    ;
    Kopecky, Martin
    ;
    Máliš, František
    ;
    Wulf, Monika
    ;
    Verheyen, Kris
    Topsoil conditions in temperate forests are influenced by several soil-forming factors, such as canopy composition (e.g. through litter quality), land-use history, atmospheric deposition, and the parent material. Many studies have evaluated the effects of single factors on physicochemical topsoil conditions, but few have assessed the simultaneous effects of multiple drivers. Here, we evaluate the combined effects of litter quality, land-use history (past land cover as well as past forest management), and atmospheric deposition on several physicochemical topsoil conditions of European temperate deciduous forest soils: bulk density, proportion of exchangeable base cations, carbon/nitrogen-ratio (C/N), litter mass, bio-available and total phosphorus, pHKCl and soil organic matter. We collected mineral soil and litter layer samples, and measured site characteristics for 190 20 × 20 m European mixed forest plots across gradients of litter quality (derived from the canopy species composition) and atmospheric deposition, and for different categories of past land cover and past forest management. We accounted for the effects of parent material on topsoil conditions by clustering our plots into three soil type groups based on texture and carbonate concentration. We found that litter quality was a stronger driver of topsoil conditions compared to land-use history or atmospheric deposition, while the soil type also affected several topsoil conditions here. Plots with higher litter quality had soils with a higher proportion of exchangeable base cations, and total phosphorus, and lower C/N-ratios and litter mass. Furthermore, the observed litter quality effects on the topsoil were independent from the regional nitrogen deposition or the soil type, although the soil type likely (co)-determined canopy composition and thus litter quality to some extent in the investigated plots. Litter quality effects on topsoil phosphorus concentrations did interact with past land cover, highlighting the need to consider land-use history when evaluating canopy effects on soil conditions. We conclude that forest managers can use the canopy composition as an important tool for influencing topsoil conditions, although soil type remains an important factor to consider.
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Responses of competitive understorey species to spatial environmental gradients inaccurately explain temporal changes
    (2018)
    De Lombaerde, Emiel
    ;
    Verheyen, Kris
    ;
    Perring, Michael P.
    ;
    Bernhardt-Römermann, Markus
    ;
    Van Calster, Hans
    ;
    Brunet, Jörg
    ;
    Chudomelová, Markéta
    ;
    Decocq, Guillaume
    ;
    Diekmann, Martin
    ;
    Durak, Tomasz
    ;
    Hédl, Radim
    ;
    Heinken, Thilo
    ;
    Hommel, Patrick
    ;
    Jaroszewicz, Bogdan
    ;
    Kopecký, Martin
    ;
    Lenoir, Jonathan
    ;
    Macek, Martin
    ;
    Máliš, František
    ;
    Mitchell, Fraser J.G.
    ;
    Naaf, Tobias
    ;
    Newman, Miles
    ;
    Petřík, Petr
    ;
    Reczyńska, Kamila
    ;
    Schmidt, Wolfgang
    ;
    Świerkosz, Krzysztof
    ;
    Vild, Ondřej
    ;
    Wulf, Monika
    ;
    Baeten, Lander
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Synthesis and future research directions linking tree diversity to growth, survival, and damage in a global network of tree diversity experiments
    (2018)
    Grossman, Jake J.
    ;
    Vanhellemont, Margot
    ;
    Barsoum, Nadia
    ;
    Bauhus, Jürgen
    ;
    Bruelheide, Helge
    ;
    Castagneyrol, Bastien
    ;
    Cavender-Bares, Jeannine
    ;
    Eisenhauer, Nico  
    ;
    Ferlian, Olga  
    ;
    Gravel, Dominique
    ;
    Hector, Andy
    ;
    Jactel, Hervé
    ;
    Kreft, Holger  
    ;
    Mereu, Simone
    ;
    Messier, Christian
    ;
    Muys, Bart
    ;
    Nock, Charles
    ;
    Paquette, Alain
    ;
    Parker, John
    ;
    Perring, Michael P.
    ;
    Ponette, Quentin
    ;
    Reich, Peter B.
    ;
    Schuldt, Andreas  
    ;
    Staab, Michael
    ;
    Weih, Martin
    ;
    Zemp, Delphine Clara
    ;
    Scherer-Lorenzen, Michael
    ;
    Verheyen, Kris
    Despite considerable research demonstrating that biodiversity increases productivity in forests and regulates herbivory and pathogen damage, there remain gaps in our understanding of the shape, magnitude, and generality of these biodiversity-ecosystem functioning (BEF) relationships. Here, we review findings from TreeDivNet, a global network of 25 tree diversity experiments, on relationships between levels of biodiversity and (a) tree growth and survival and (b) damage to trees from pests and pathogens. Tree diversity often improved the survival and above- and belowground growth of young trees. The mechanistic bases of the diversity effects on tree growth and survival include both selection effects (i.e., an increasing impact of particular species in more species-rich communities) and complementary effects (e.g. related to resource differentiation and facilitation). Plant traits and abiotic stressors may mediate these relationships. Studies of the responses of invertebrate and vertebrate herbivory and pathogen damage have demonstrated that trees in more diverse experimental plots may experience more, less, or similar damage compared to conspecific trees in less diverse plots. Documented mechanisms producing these patterns include changes in concentration, frequency, and apparency of hosts; herbivore and pathogen diet breadth; the spatial scale of interactions; and herbivore and pathogen regulation by natural enemies. Our review of findings from TreeDivNet indicates that tree diversity experiments are extending BEF research across systems and scales, complementing previous BEF work in grasslands by providing opportunities to use remote sensing and spectral approaches to study BEF dynamics, integrate belowground and aboveground approaches, and trace the consequences of tree physiology for ecosystem functioning. This extension of BEF research into tree-dominated systems is improving ecologists’ capacity to understand the mechanistic bases behind BEF relationships. Tree diversity experiments also present opportunities for novel research. Since experimental tree diversity plantations enable measurements at tree, neighbourhood and plot level, they allow for explicit consideration of temporal and spatial scales in BEF dynamics. Presently, most TreeDivNet experiments have run for less than ten years. Given the longevity of trees, exciting results on BEF relationships are expected in the future.
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Tree diversity reduces variability in sapling survival under drought
    (2024)
    Blondeel, Haben
    ;
    Guillemot, Joannès
    ;
    Martin‐StPaul, Nicolas
    ;
    Druel, Arsène
    ;
    Bilodeau‐Gauthier, Simon
    ;
    Bauhus, Jürgen
    ;
    Grossiord, Charlotte
    ;
    Hector, Andrew
    ;
    Jactel, Hervé
    ;
    Jensen, Joel
    ;
    Messier, Christian
    ;
    Muys, Bart
    ;
    Serrano‐León, Hernán
    ;
    Auge, Harald
    ;
    Barsoum, Nadia
    ;
    Birhane, Emiru
    ;
    Bruelheide, Helge
    ;
    Cavender‐Bares, Jeannine
    ;
    Chu, Chengjin
    ;
    Cumming, Jonathan R.
    ;
    Damtew, Abebe
    ;
    Eisenhauer, Nico
    ;
    Ferlian, Olga
    ;
    Fiedler, Sebastian  
    ;
    Ganade, Gislene
    ;
    Godbold, Douglas L.
    ;
    Gravel, Dominique
    ;
    Hall, Jefferson S.
    ;
    Hölscher, Dirk
    ;
    Hulvey, Kristin B.
    ;
    Koricheva, Julia
    ;
    Kreft, Holger
    ;
    Lapadat, Cathleen
    ;
    Liang, Jingjing
    ;
    Liu, Xiaojuan
    ;
    Meredieu, Céline
    ;
    Mereu, Simone
    ;
    Montgomery, Rebecca
    ;
    Morillas, Lourdes
    ;
    Nock, Charles
    ;
    Paquette, Alain
    ;
    Parker, John D.
    ;
    Parker, William C.
    ;
    Paterno, Gustavo B.
    ;
    Perring, Michael P.
    ;
    Ponette, Quentin
    ;
    Potvin, Catherine
    ;
    Reich, Peter
    ;
    Rentch, James
    ;
    Rewald, Boris
    ;
    Sandén, Hans
    ;
    Sinacore, Katherine
    ;
    Standish, Rachel J.
    ;
    Stefanski, Artur
    ;
    Tobin, Patrick C.
    ;
    van Breugel, Michiel
    ;
    Fagundes, Marina Vergara
    ;
    Weih, Martin
    ;
    Williams, Laura J.
    ;
    Zhou, Mo
    ;
    Scherer‐Lorenzen, Michael
    ;
    Verheyen, Kris
    ;
    Baeten, Lander
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Understanding context dependency in the response of forest understorey plant communities to nitrogen deposition
    (2018)
    Perring, Michael P.
    ;
    Diekmann, Martin
    ;
    Midolo, Gabriele
    ;
    Schellenberger Costa, David
    ;
    Bernhardt-Römermann, Markus
    ;
    Otto, Johanna C.J.
    ;
    Gilliam, Frank S.
    ;
    Hedwall, Per-Ola
    ;
    Nordin, Annika
    ;
    Dirnböck, Thomas
    ;
    Simkin, Samuel M.
    ;
    Máliš, František
    ;
    Blondeel, Haben
    ;
    Brunet, Jörg
    ;
    Chudomelová, Markéta
    ;
    Durak, Tomasz
    ;
    De Frenne, Pieter
    ;
    Hédl, Radim
    ;
    Kopecký, Martin
    ;
    Landuyt, Dries
    ;
    Li, Daijiang
    ;
    Manning, Peter
    ;
    Petřík, Petr
    ;
    Reczyńska, Kamila
    ;
    Schmidt, Wolfgang
    ;
    Standovár, Tibor
    ;
    Świerkosz, Krzysztof
    ;
    Vild, Ondřej
    ;
    Waller, Donald M.
    ;
    Verheyen, Kris

About

About Us
FAQ
ORCID
End User Agreement
Privacy policy
Cookie consent
Imprint

Contact

Team GRO.publications
support-gro.publications@uni-goettingen.de
Matrix Chat: #support_gro_publications
Feedback

Göttingen Research Online

Göttingen Research Online bundles various services for Göttingen researchers:

GRO.data (research data repository)
GRO.plan (data management planning)
GRO.publications (publication data repository)
Logo Uni Göttingen
Logo Campus Göttingen
Logo SUB Göttingen
Logo eResearch Alliance

Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.