Ecosystem services (ES) approaches to biodiversity conservation are currently high on the ecological research and policy agendas. However, despite awealth of studies into biodiversity’s role in maintaining ES (B–ES relationships) across landscapes, we still lack generalities in the nature and strengths of these linkages. Reasons for this are manifold, but can largely be attributed to (i) a lack of adherence to definitions and thus a confusion between final ES and the ecosystem functions (EFs) underpinning them, (ii) a focus on uninformative biodiversity indices and singular hypotheses and (iii) top-down analyses across large spatial scales and overlooking of context-dependency. The biodiversity–ecosystem functioning (B–EF) field provides an alternate context for examining biodiversity’s mechanistic role in shaping ES, focusing on species’ characteristics that may drive EFs via multiple mechanisms across contexts. Despite acknowledgements of a need for B–ES research to look towards underlying B–EF linkages, the connections between these areas of research remains weak. With this review, we pull together recent B–EF findings to identify key areas for future developments in B–ES research. We highlight a means by which B–ES research may begin to identify howand when multiple underlying B–EF relationships may scale to final ES delivery and trade-offs.
CITATION STYLE
Duncan, C., Thompson, J. R., & Pettorelli, N. (2015, October 14). The quest for a mechanistic understanding of biodiversity–Ecosystem services relationships. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. Royal Society of London. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2015.1348
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