Plant domestication disrupts biodiversity effects across major crop types
Chacón‐Labella et al., 2019.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/ele.13336
.
Chacón‐Labella et al., 2019.
Plant diversity fosters productivity in natural ecosystems. Biodiversity
effects might increase agricultural yields at no cost in additional
inputs. However, the effects of diversity on crop assemblages are
inconsistent, probably because crops and wild plants differ in a range
of traits relevant to plant–plant interactions. We tested whether
domestication has changed the potential of crop mixtures to over‐yield
by comparing the performance and traits of major crop species and those
of their wild progenitors under varying levels of diversity. We found
stronger biodiversity effects in mixtures of wild progenitors, due to
larger selection effects. Variation in selection effects was partly
explained by within‐mixture differences in leaf size. Our results
indicate that domestication might disrupt the ability of crops to
benefit from diverse neighbourhoods via reduced trait variance.
These results highlight potential limitations of current crop mixtures
to over‐yield and the potential of breeding to re‐establish variance and
increase mixture performance.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/ele.13336
.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario
Por favor, deja tu comentario