Forests are of major importance to human society, contributing several crucial ecosystem services. Biodiversity is suggested to positively influence multiple services but evidence from natural systems at scales relevant to management is scarce. Here, across a scale of 400,000 km2, we report that tree species richness in production forests shows positive to positively hump-shaped relationships with multiple ecosystem services. These include production of tree biomass, soil carbon storage, berry production and game production potential. For example, biomass production was approximately 50% greater with five than with one tree species. In addition, we show positive relationships between tree species richness and proxies for other biodiversity components. Importantly, no single tree species was able to promote all services, and some services were negatively correlated to each other. Management of production forests will therefore benefit from considering multiple tree species to sustain the full range of benefits that the society obtains from forests. Tree diversity is thought to benefit forest ecosystems, but evidence from large-scale studies is scarce. This study of a 400,000 km2forest area shows that higher tree species richness supports higher levels of multiple ecosystem services, and therefore also a more sustainable management of production forests.
Higher levels of multiple ecosystem services are found in forests with more tree species
Lars Gamfeldt,Tord Snäll,Robert Bagchi,Micael Jonsson,Lena Gustafsson,P. Kjellander,Maria C Ruiz-Jaen,Mats Fröberg,Johan Stendahl,C. Philipson,Grzegorz Mikusiński,Erik Andersson,B. Westerlund,Henrik Andrén,Fredrik Moberg,Jon Moen,Jan Bengtsson
Published 2013 in Nature Communications
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2013
- Venue
Nature Communications
- Publication date
2013-01-08
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Environmental Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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