posted on 2025-12-11, 03:19authored byEric W Seabloom, E Batzer, JM Chase, W Stanley Harpole, PB Adler, S Bagchi, JD Bakker, IC Barrio, L Biederman, EH Boughton, MN Bugalho, MC Caldeira, JA Catford, P Daleo, N Eisenhauer, A Eskelinen, S Haider, LM Hallett, I Svala Jónsdóttir, K Kimmel, M Kuhlman, A MacDougall, CD Molina, JL Moore, John MorganJohn Morgan, R Muthukrishnan, T Ohlert, AC Risch, C Roscher, M Schütz, G Sonnier, PM Tognetti, R Virtanen, PA Wilfahrt, ET Borer
<p dir="ltr">The effects of altered nutrient supplies and herbivore density on species diversity vary with spatial scale, because coexistence mechanisms are scale dependent. This scale dependence may alter the shape of the species–area relationship (SAR), which can be described by changes in species richness (<i>S</i>) as a power function of the sample area (<i>A</i>): <i>S</i> = <i>cA</i><sup>z</sup>, where <i>c</i> and <i>z</i> are constants. </p><p dir="ltr">We analysed the effects of experimental manipulations of nutrient supply and herbivore density on species richness across a range of scales (0.01–75 m<sup>2</sup>) at 30 grasslands in 10 countries. </p><p dir="ltr">We found that nutrient addition reduced the number of species that could co-occur locally, indicated by the SAR intercepts (log <i>c</i>), but did not affect the SAR slopes (<i>z</i>). As a result, proportional species loss due to nutrient enrichment was largely unchanged across sampling scales, whereas total species loss increased over threefold across our range of sampling scales.</p>
Funding
This work was generated using data from the Nutrient Network (http://www.nutnet.org) experiment, funded at the site scale by individual researchers. Coordination and data management have been supported by funding to E. Borer and E. Seabloom from the National Science Foundation Research Coordination Network (NSF-DEB-1042132) and Long-Term Ecological Research (NSF-DEB-1234162 & DEB-1831944 to Cedar Creek LTER) programs and the University of Minnesota’s Institute on the Environment (DG-0001-13).