AI Article Synopsis

  • Increased species diversity, specifically mixing alsike clover (AC) and black medic (BM), can enhance crop productivity and resilience during droughts by leveraging resource complementarity and different growth responses.
  • Experiments showed that the mixture outperformed sole crops, particularly in non-stressed conditions, but the benefits were inconsistent under varying drought levels.
  • While growth asynchrony between AC and BM contributed to improved resilience, AC alone still demonstrated the highest resilience, highlighting the importance of species identity in drought resistance strategies.

Article Abstract

In the face of increasingly frequent droughts threatening crop performance, ecological theory suggests that higher species diversity may help buffering productivity by making systems more resistant through resource complementarity and more resilient through higher response diversity. However, empirical evidence for these diversity effects under drought stress has remained patchy. In two pot experiments, we explored whether mixing two legume species with a contrasting response to water availability, alsike clover (AC) and black medic (BM), promotes resistance to cumulative drought stress, and resilience of aboveground crop biomass to a transient drought event. The mixture was more productive than the average of the sole crops, and this mixture effect was higher in the non-stressed than in the drought-stressed plants. However, with six levels of constant drought intensities, the mixture effect was not consistently affected by drought level. Response diversity was evident as asynchrony of growth in the two species after the drought event, with BM re-growing faster than AC. Significant resilience to drought was observed in sole AC, i.e., without response diversity. Resilience was larger in AC than in BM and increased from 44 to 72 days after sowing (DAS). The mixture was more resilient than the average resilience of the sole crops at 72 DAS, but it was never more resilient than AC, indicating that resilience is promoted by, but not dependent on response diversity. We conclude that crop diversity may contribute to drought resilience through growth asynchrony, but that species identity plays a crucial role in making systems more drought-resilient.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7283915PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2020.00721DOI Listing

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