Abstract

Abstract Concern is growing about the consequences of biodiversity loss for ecosystem functioning, for the provision of ecosystem services, and for human well being. Experimental evidence for a relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem process rates is compelling, but the issue remains contentious. Here, we present the first rigorous quantitative assessment of this relationship through meta‐analysis of experimental work spanning 50 years to June 2004. We analysed 446 measures of biodiversity effects (252 in grasslands), 319 of which involved primary producer manipulations or measurements. Our analyses show that: biodiversity effects are weaker if biodiversity manipulations are less well controlled; effects of biodiversity change on processes are weaker at the ecosystem compared with the community level and are negative at the population level; productivity‐related effects decline with increasing number of trophic links between those elements manipulated and those measured; biodiversity effects on stability measures (‘insurance’ effects) are not stronger than biodiversity effects on performance measures. For those ecosystem services which could be assessed here, there is clear evidence that biodiversity has positive effects on most. Whilst such patterns should be further confirmed, a precautionary approach to biodiversity management would seem prudent in the meantime.

Keywords

BiodiversityEcosystemEcosystem servicesTrophic levelEcologyMeasurement of biodiversityProductivityEnvironmental resource managementGeographyEnvironmental scienceBiologyBiodiversity conservationEconomics

MeSH Terms

BiodiversityConservation of Natural ResourcesEcosystemPopulation Dynamics

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
2006
Type
review
Volume
9
Issue
10
Pages
1146-1156
Citations
2575
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

2575
OpenAlex
100
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Cite This

Patricia Balvanera, Andrea B. Pfisterer, Nina Buchmann et al. (2006). Quantifying the evidence for biodiversity effects on ecosystem functioning and services. Ecology Letters , 9 (10) , 1146-1156. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1461-0248.2006.00963.x

Identifiers

DOI
10.1111/j.1461-0248.2006.00963.x
PMID
16972878

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%