Complementarity of ecosystem types drives landscape-wide productivity in North America

preprint OA: closed
📄 Open PDF Full text JSON View at publisher
Full text 1,264 characters · extracted from oa-doi-fallback · click to expand
Abstract Landscape mosaics with a greater diversity of ecosystems tend to be more productive, mirroring the well-established relationship between species diversity and productivity observed in plot-scale biodiversity experiments. However, the mechanisms driving this effect at the landscape scale remain unclear. Here, we analyze a 15-year time series of satellite-derived primary productivity across over 50,000 landscape plots that vary in ecosystem composition. Our results demonstrate that more diverse landscapes are more productive and more predictable under environmental stress, especially drought. Using statistical partitioning, we show that these diversity effects are primarily driven by complementarity, with productivity gains that are broadly shared among ecosystem types rather than being dominated by a few. The specific ecosystem types that contributed most to landscape functioning varied regionally, but their role in driving mixture productivity remained unaffected by drought. These findings extend biodiversity theory to the landscape scale, emphasizing the critical role of higher-order diversity in shaping ecosystem function and informing landscape management. Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.

Text is read by the "Ask this paper" AI Q&A widget below. Extraction quality varies by source — PMC NXML preserves structure cleanly, OA-HTML may include some navigation residue, and OA-PDF can have broken hyphenation. The publisher copy (via DOI) is the canonical version.

My notes (saved in your browser only)

Ask this paper AI returns verbatim quotes from the full text · source: oa-doi-fallback

Answers must be backed by verbatim quotes from this paper's full text. Hallucinated quotes are dropped automatically; if no verbatim passage answers the question, we say so. How this works

Citation neighborhood (no data yet)

We don't have any in-corpus citations linked to this paper yet. This is a recent paper (2025) — citers typically take a year or two to land, and the OpenAlex reference graph may still be filling in.

Source provenance

europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00