C. P. H. Mulder
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
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Featured researches published by C. P. H. Mulder.
Ecological Monographs | 2005
E. M. Spehn; Andy Hector; Jasmin Joshi; Michael Scherer-Lorenzen; Bernhard Schmid; E. Bazeley-White; Carl Beierkuhnlein; Maria C. Caldeira; Matthias Diemer; Panayiotis G. Dimitrakopoulos; John A Finn; Helena Freitas; Paul S. Giller; J. Good; R. Harris; Peter Högberg; Kerstin Huss-Danell; Ari Jumpponen; Julia Koricheva; P. W. Leadley; Michel Loreau; A. Minns; C. P. H. Mulder; G. O'Donovan; S. J. Otway; Cecilia Palmborg; J. S. Pereira; A. B. Pfisterer; Alexandra Prinz; David Read
We present a multisite analysis of the relationship between plant diversity and ecosystem functioning within the European BIODEPTH network of plant-diversity manipulation experiments. We report results of the analysis of 11 variables addressing several aspects of key ecosystem processes like biomass production, resource use (space, light, and nitrogen), and decomposition, measured across three years in plots of varying plant species richness at eight different European grassland field sites. Differences among sites explained substantial and significant amounts of the variation of most of the ecosystem processes examined. However, against this background of geographic variation, all the aspects of plant diversity and composition we examined (i.e., both numbers and types of species and functional groups) produced significant, mostly positive impacts on ecosystem processes. n nAnalyses using the additive partitioning method revealed that complementarity effects (greater net yields than predicted from monocultures due to resource partitioning, positive interactions, etc.) were stronger and more consistent than selection effects (the covariance between monoculture yield and change in yield in mixtures) caused by dominance of species with particular traits. In general, communities with a higher diversity of species and functional groups were more productive and utilized resources more completely by intercepting more light, taking up more nitrogen, and occupying more of the available space. Diversity had significant effects through both increased vegetation cover and greater nitrogen retention by plants when this resource was more abundant through N2 fixation by legumes. However, additional positive diversity effects remained even after controlling for differences in vegetation cover and for the presence of legumes in communities. Diversity effects were stronger on above- than belowground processes. In particular, clear diversity effects on decomposition were only observed at one of the eight sites. n nThe ecosystem effects of plant diversity also varied between sites and years. In general, diversity effects were lowest in the first year and stronger later in the experiment, indicating that they were not transitional due to community establishment. These analyses of our complete ecosystem process data set largely reinforce our previous results, and those from comparable biodiversity experiments, and extend the generality of diversity–ecosystem functioning relationships to multiple sites, years, and processes.
Oecologia | 2000
Julia Koricheva; C. P. H. Mulder; Bernhard Schmid; Jasmin Joshi; Kerstin Huss-Danell
Abstract. We studied the effects of plant diversity on abundance of invertebrate herbivores, parasitoids and predators in two grassland communities (one in Switzerland and one in Sweden) in which plant species richness and functional diversity have been experimentally manipulated. Among herbivores, the abundance of only the most sessile and specialised groups (leafhoppers and wingless aphids) was affected by plant diversity. At both sites, numbers of leafhoppers in sweep net samples showed a linear, negative relationship with plant species number whereas numbers of wingless aphids in suction samples increased with the number of plant functional groups (grasses, legumes, and non-legume forbs) present in the plot. Activity of carabid beetles and spiders (as revealed by pitfall catches) and the total number of predators in pitfalls at the Swiss site decreased linearly with increases in the number of plant species and plant functional groups. Abundance of more specialised enemies, hymenopteran parasitoids, was not affected by the manipulations of plant diversity. Path analysis and analysis of covariance indicated that plant diversity effects on invertebrate abundance were mostly indirect and mediated by changes in plant biomass and cover. At both sites, plant species composition (i.e. the identity of plant species in a mixture) affected numbers of most of the examined groups of invertebrates and was, therefore, a more important determinant of invertebrate abundance in grasslands than plant species richness per se or the number of plant functional groups. The presence of legumes in a mixture was especially important and led to higher numbers of most invertebrate groups. The similarity of invertebrate responses to plant diversity at the two study sites indicates that general patterns in abundance of different trophic groups can be detected across plant diversity gradients under different environmental conditions.
Ecology | 2010
Andy Hector; Yann Hautier; Philippe Saner; Luca Wacker; Robert Bagchi; Jasmin Joshi; Michael Scherer-Lorenzen; E. M. Spehn; E. Bazeley-White; Maja Weilenmann; Maria C. Caldeira; Panayiotis G. Dimitrakopoulos; John A. Finn; Kerstin Huss-Danell; Ari Jumpponen; C. P. H. Mulder; Cecilia Palmborg; J. S. Pereira; A.-S. D. Siamantziouras; A. C. Terry; Andreas Y. Troumbis; Bernhard Schmid; Michel Loreau
Insurance effects of biodiversity can stabilize the functioning of multispecies ecosystems against environmental variability when differential species responses lead to asynchronous population dynamics. When responses are not perfectly positively correlated, declines in some populations are compensated by increases in others, smoothing variability in ecosystem productivity. This variance reduction effect of biodiversity is analogous to the risk-spreading benefits of diverse investment portfolios in financial markets. We use data from the BIODEPTH network of grassland biodiversity experiments to perform a general test for stabilizing effects of plant diversity on the temporal variability of individual species, functional groups, and aggregate communities. We tested three potential mechanisms: reduction of temporal variability through population asynchrony; enhancement of long-term average performance through positive selection effects; and increases in the temporal mean due to overyielding. Our results support a stabilizing effect of diversity on the temporal variability of grassland aboveground annual net primary production through two mechanisms. Two-species communities with greater population asynchrony were more stable in their average production over time due to compensatory fluctuations. Overyielding also stabilized productivity by increasing levels of average biomass production relative to temporal variability. However, there was no evidence for a performance-enhancing effect on the temporal mean through positive selection effects. In combination with previous work, our results suggest that stabilizing effects of diversity on community productivity through population asynchrony and overyielding appear to be general in grassland ecosystems.
Oecologia | 2002
C. P. H. Mulder; Ari Jumpponen; Peter Högberg; Kerstin Huss-Danell
Abstract. Positive relationships between species richness and ecosystem processes such as productivity or nitrogen cycling can be the result of a number of mechanisms. We examined how species richness, biomass, and legume presence, diversity, and abundance explained nitrogen dynamics in experimental grassland plots in northern Sweden. Nitrogen concentrations and δ15N values were measured in plants grown in 28 mixtures (58 plots) including 1, 2, 4, 8 or 12 local grassland species over four years. Values for δ15N declined over time for all three functional groups (grasses, legumes, and non-leguminous forbs), suggesting greater reliance on N fixed by legumes over time by all species. Above ground percent nitrogen (%N) also declined over time but root %N and total N did not. Path analysis of above ground data suggested that two main factors affected %N and the size of the N pool. First, higher plant diversity (species richness) increased total N through increased biomass in the plot. Although in the first two years of the experiment this was the result of a greater probability of inclusion of at least one legume, in the last two years diversity had a significant effect on biomass beyond this effect. Second, percent legumes planted in the plots had a strong effect on above ground %N and δ15N, but a much smaller effect on above ground biomass. In contrast, greater plant diversity affected N in roots both by increasing biomass and by decreasing %N (after controlling for effects mediated by root biomass and legume biomass). Increased legume biomass resulted in higher %N and lower δ15N for both non-legume forbs and grasses in the first year, but only for grasses in the third year. We conclude that a sampling effect (greater probability of including a legume) contributed towards greater biomass and total N in high-diversity communities early on in the experiment, but that over time this effect weakened and other positive effects of diversity became more important.
Biology Letters | 2007
David A. Wardle; Peter J. Bellingham; Tadashi Fukami; C. P. H. Mulder
Despite recent interest in understanding the effects of human-induced global change on carbon (C) storage in terrestrial ecosystems, most studies have overlooked the influence of a major element of global change, namely biological invasions. We quantified ecosystem C storage, both above- and below-ground, on each of 18 islands off the coast of New Zealand. Some islands support high densities of nesting seabirds, while others have been invaded by predatory rats and host few seabirds. Our results show that, by preying upon seabirds, rats have indirectly enhanced C sequestration in live plant biomass by 104%, reduced C sequestration in non-living pools by 26% and increased total ecosystem C storage by 37%. Given the current worldwide distribution of rats and other invasive predatory mammals, and the consequent disappearance of seabird colonies, these predators may be important determinants of ecosystem C sequestration.
Science | 1999
Andy Hector; Bernhard Schmid; Carl Beierkuhnlein; Maria C. Caldeira; Matthias Diemer; Panayiotis G. Dimitrakopoulos; John A Finn; Helena Freitas; Paul S. Giller; J. Good; R. Harris; Peter Högberg; Kerstin Huss-Danell; Jasmin Joshi; Ari Jumpponen; Christian Körner; P. W. Leadley; Michel Loreau; A. Minns; C. P. H. Mulder; G. O'Donovan; S. J. Otway; J. S. Pereira; Alexandra Prinz; David Read; Michael Scherer-Lorenzen; Ernst-Detlef Schulze; A.-S. D. Siamantziouras; E. M. Spehn; A. C. Terry
Ecology Letters | 2001
Jasmin Joshi; Bernhard Schmid; Maria C. Caldeira; Panayiotis G. Dimitrakopoulos; J. Good; R. Harris; Andy Hector; Kerstin Huss-Danell; Ari Jumpponen; A. Minns; C. P. H. Mulder; J. S. Pereira; A. Prinz; Michael Scherer-Lorenzen; A.-S. D. Siamantziouras; A. C. Terry; Andreas Y. Troumbis; John H. Lawton
Functional Ecology | 2007
Andy Hector; Jasmin Joshi; Michael Scherer-Lorenzen; Bernhard Schmid; E. M. Spehn; Luca Wacker; Maja Weilenmann; E. Bazeley-White; Carl Beierkuhnlein; Maria C. Caldeira; Panayiotis G. Dimitrakopoulos; John A. Finn; Kerstin Huss-Danell; Ari Jumpponen; Paul W. Leadley; Michel Loreau; C. P. H. Mulder; Carsten Neßhöver; Cecilia Palmborg; David Read; A.-S. D. Siamantziouras; A. C. Terry; Andreas Y. Troumbis
Functional Ecology | 2002
Ari Jumpponen; Peter Högberg; Kerstin Huss-Danell; C. P. H. Mulder
Journal of Ecology | 2005
Ari Jumpponen; C. P. H. Mulder; Kerstin Huss-Danell; Peter Högberg