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Exploring the relationship between restored ecosystem function and species composition: a meta-analysis

The idea that biodiversity confers higher levels of ecosystem functioning has been used as an argument for the conservation of biodiversity, and the relationship between these variables has been well researched. Ecosystem restoration often aims to restore former ecosystem functioning as well as spec...

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Main Author: Forsythe,Katherine Jane
Other Authors: Carrick, Peter
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology 2014
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access_status_str Open Access
author Forsythe,Katherine Jane
author2 Carrick, Peter
author_browse Carrick, Peter
Forsythe,Katherine Jane
author_facet Carrick, Peter
Forsythe,Katherine Jane
author_sort Forsythe,Katherine Jane
collection Thesis
description The idea that biodiversity confers higher levels of ecosystem functioning has been used as an argument for the conservation of biodiversity, and the relationship between these variables has been well researched. Ecosystem restoration often aims to restore former ecosystem functioning as well as specific species assemblages, not just biodiversity. In many cases monitoring programmes lack funds to measure all these aspects and often assume relationships between these variables; however, these relationships remain largely untested. In this thesis, I undertake the first ever meta-analysis of studies measuring ecological function and species composition in restored sites to test whether such a relationship exists. Bray-Curtis similarity measures were used to compare species composition for each site compared to multiple reference sites. Indicators of ecosystem function were also compared to reference sites, taking into account natural variation within reference sites. A weak relationship between ecosystem function and species composition was found, and it differed between different groups of ecosystem functions. Live plant biomass and structural framework ecosystem functions increased in similarity to reference sites as species composition also increased in similarity to reference sites. Nutrients, soil attributes and interactions between biotic component as well as litter and deadwood production, showed little association with species composition, with levels of ecosystem functioning showing little change as species composition became closer to reference sites. Variables relating to nutrients, soil attributes, and biotic interactions were always similar to intact sites regardless of the degree to which species composition had been restored. Live plant biomass, litter and deadwood production, and framework ecosystem functions, however, often did not reach reference levels of functioning, even when full species composition was restored. This analysis found that overall the shape of the relationship indicates redundancy in species composition, suggesting that increasing similarity in terms of species composition initially increases ecosystem function; however beyond a point, additional similarity does not further assist in the restoration of ecosystem function to reference levels of similarity. The main difference to biodiversity ecosystem function relationships comes with the fact that all ecosystem functions were not returned even when restored sites had similar species composition to reference sites, indicating that something, possibly time, is limiting the return of full ecosystem function to restoration sites. Finally, this research indicates that the relationship between species composition and ecosystem function is not consistent and it would be unwise to use species composition or ecosystem function as proxies for one another.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2014
publishDateRange 2014
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publisher Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/6564 Exploring the relationship between restored ecosystem function and species composition: a meta-analysis Forsythe,Katherine Jane Carrick, Peter Amar, Arjun The idea that biodiversity confers higher levels of ecosystem functioning has been used as an argument for the conservation of biodiversity, and the relationship between these variables has been well researched. Ecosystem restoration often aims to restore former ecosystem functioning as well as specific species assemblages, not just biodiversity. In many cases monitoring programmes lack funds to measure all these aspects and often assume relationships between these variables; however, these relationships remain largely untested. In this thesis, I undertake the first ever meta-analysis of studies measuring ecological function and species composition in restored sites to test whether such a relationship exists. Bray-Curtis similarity measures were used to compare species composition for each site compared to multiple reference sites. Indicators of ecosystem function were also compared to reference sites, taking into account natural variation within reference sites. A weak relationship between ecosystem function and species composition was found, and it differed between different groups of ecosystem functions. Live plant biomass and structural framework ecosystem functions increased in similarity to reference sites as species composition also increased in similarity to reference sites. Nutrients, soil attributes and interactions between biotic component as well as litter and deadwood production, showed little association with species composition, with levels of ecosystem functioning showing little change as species composition became closer to reference sites. Variables relating to nutrients, soil attributes, and biotic interactions were always similar to intact sites regardless of the degree to which species composition had been restored. Live plant biomass, litter and deadwood production, and framework ecosystem functions, however, often did not reach reference levels of functioning, even when full species composition was restored. This analysis found that overall the shape of the relationship indicates redundancy in species composition, suggesting that increasing similarity in terms of species composition initially increases ecosystem function; however beyond a point, additional similarity does not further assist in the restoration of ecosystem function to reference levels of similarity. The main difference to biodiversity ecosystem function relationships comes with the fact that all ecosystem functions were not returned even when restored sites had similar species composition to reference sites, indicating that something, possibly time, is limiting the return of full ecosystem function to restoration sites. Finally, this research indicates that the relationship between species composition and ecosystem function is not consistent and it would be unwise to use species composition or ecosystem function as proxies for one another. 2014-08-15T14:13:16Z 2014-08-15T14:13:16Z 2013 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6564 eng application/pdf Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Forsythe,Katherine Jane
Exploring the relationship between restored ecosystem function and species composition: a meta-analysis
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Exploring the relationship between restored ecosystem function and species composition: a meta-analysis
title_full Exploring the relationship between restored ecosystem function and species composition: a meta-analysis
title_fullStr Exploring the relationship between restored ecosystem function and species composition: a meta-analysis
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the relationship between restored ecosystem function and species composition: a meta-analysis
title_short Exploring the relationship between restored ecosystem function and species composition: a meta-analysis
title_sort exploring the relationship between restored ecosystem function and species composition a meta analysis
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6564
work_keys_str_mv AT forsythekatherinejane exploringtherelationshipbetweenrestoredecosystemfunctionandspeciescompositionametaanalysis