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Agronomic value and provisioning services of multi-species swards C. Huyghe, I. Litrico, F. Surault INRA, France FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Outline • Introduction • Theoretical bases • Agronomic performances of multispecies swards • Consequences for breeders and farmers FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Introduction FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Introduction Biomass production Feeding value Persistency Preservation of the environment Less nitrate leaching Protection of the biodiversity Social acceptability Meeting the aversion risk of farmers, i.e. reducing the variation among years FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Increasingly important stakes In a context of sustainable agriculture Usual stakes A real need to improve agronomic value of grasslands Introduction In a context of scarcity (SCAR, 2011) Less fossil resource of energy and nutrients Less labour resource A new paradigm: paradigm of efficiency, through valorisation of ecosystem services. This needs implementation of transitions Technological innovations Ecological intensification: « yield gap » Accelerating adoption of research results and innovations by farmers and industry: « innovation gap » Making the agri-food system more resilient: « resilience gap » Encouraging economic stakeholders to take risks: « sociotechnological gap » The Millenium Ecosystem Assesment (2005) is providing the framework FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Introduction The hypothesis of the presentation Multispecies swards make it possible to improve the various ecosytems services and particularly primary production This is true both in temporary grasslands and permanent grasslands Increasing species and functional diversity leads to a higher biomass production in a given year and better persistency Overyielding FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Theoretical bases explaining community functioning FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Theoretical bases A community structure (assembly) may be explained by Habitat filtering Niche differentiation Trait value Habitat filtering Assembled species are meeting the same filters: Niche differentiation • • X X They have common functional traits: Response traits This is relevant with the redundancy of species in plant communities and redundancy of trait (response trait) values in species Assembled species are meeting the different niches : • Differences of trait values among species Realized community FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Theoretical bases What are the filters? The environmental conditions. Agronomic practices Defoliation regime (grazing vs. cutting) Nitrogen fertilisation Example from Suding et al (2005): • • In a group of experiments across US After N fertilisation, the dry matter production increased while the species diversity decreased (except in marshlands) The filters determine Number of plant species Identity of species - Functional groups (i.e. grasses, legumes, dicots) FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Theoretical bases What does happen in a multispecies sward: how to achieve overyielding? Ecosystemic processes Facilitation Complementarity Neutral Competition Number of species FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Theoretical bases Competition Facilitation Increasing resources Actual niche Actual niche Competition Predation Recruitment Refuge against predation Increasing recruitment Pests and diseases • • • Fundamental niche Facilitation may reduce the habitat filtering and Improving increase the number of species habitat Competition, facilitation and complementarity are due FOOD to functional traits: effect traits A G R I increasing C U L T U R E the Positive effects should increase when ENVIRONMENT functional diversity Fundamental niche Data from the real life FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT This paper has 736 citations (in Web of Science, 28/05/2012) A seminal paper: Hector et al, 1999 in Science FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT • Guo et al (2006) : a study over several years and several sites in the US: a trend towards overyielding but with a plateau (community saturation) FOOD AGRICULTURE E N V I R O N MM2 E N Poitiers, T 8 décembre 2010 Kirwan et al, 2007: mixtures with 4 species grass – legumes with species adapted to experimental sites : Monocultures; : Associations Beyond the expected effect due to functional diversty of grass and legumes, a positive effect was detected with 2 grass species (> 1 species) and 2 legume species (> 1 species) FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT An outstanding experiment from Iena: increasing the number of species reduces the disease pressure A true situation of facilitation % infection permodule module per % infection Mean infection score per plant 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 1 2 3 Number ofoffunctional groups Number functional groups Number of sown species FOOD AGRICULTURE E N V I R O N MM2 E N Poitiers, T 8 décembre 2010 4 Optimizing species and functional diversity FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Optimising the species and functional diversity Environment Agronomic practices In mesotrophic environments Facilitation Complementarity Habitat filtering Pool of species (sown or naturally available) Overyielding Possible reduction of the species diversity for effect traits (drift) Reduction of the species diversity for response traits Competition In highly fertilised environments Little Overyielding FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Diversity and species identity FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Species diversity and identity When increasing the number of species, the probability of getting through the habitat filtering increases Adaptation of species to environments and agronomic practices Cocksfoot and tall fescue are becoming dominant in dry climates: response trait to dry environments Species may have a mean beneficial effect on the plant communities: the concept of essentiality ES=Yi/Yd Intact community S Community without S FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Species diversity and identity A decision toolkit for farmers and advisors Choosing the right species: Adaptation to environmental conditions and agronomic practices Optimizing diversity Maximising the functional diversity for effect traits Homogeneity for response traits and agronomic value FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Is breeding possible in these conditions? FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Genetic diversity How to integrate the species diversity as a constraint for breeding? A decision toolkit for breeders The role of within variety genetic variance Revising the breeding objectives Breeding for response traits Adaptation to environmental conditions and agronomic practices: where are the markets? Breeding for biomass production is positive for adaptation Disease resistance is less important in communities Improving feeding value FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Conclusions FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Increasing species diversity has in nearly all situations positive effects on primary production and no negative effects on other ecosystem services It meets sustainability requirements It is relevant with the paradigm of efficiency It is compatible with further agronomic and breeding progesses FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT Acknowledgements: • Multisward project and partners Thank you for your attention!!! FOOD AGRICULTURE ENVIRONMENT