Multispecies grasslands produce more yield from lower nitrogen inputs across a climatic gradient
Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2026
Author
O’Malley, James
Finn, John A.
Malisch, Carsten S.
Suter, Matthias
Meyer, Sebastian T.
Peratoner, Giovanni
Thivierge, Marie-Noëlle
Abalos, Diego
Adler, Paul R.
Bezemer, T. Martijn
Black, Alistair D.
Ergon, Åshild
Grange, Guylain
Hakl, Josef
Hoekstra, Nyncke J.
Huguenin-Elie, Olivier
Jing, Jingying
Jungers, Jacob M.
Lajeunesse, Julie
Loges, Ralf
Louarn, Gaëtan
Lüscher, Andreas
Moloney, Thomas
Reynolds, Christopher K.
Sturite, Ievina
Khan, Ali Sultan
Vishwakarma, Rishabh
Zhang, Yingjun
Zhu, Feng
Brophy, Caroline
Faculty
Wydział Rolnictwa, Ogrodnictwa i Biotechnologii
PBN discipline
agriculture and horticulture
Journal
Science
ISSN
0036-8075
Volume
391
Number
6781
Pages from-to
179-183
Abstract (EN)
High-yielding forage grasslands frequently comprise low species diversity and receive high inputs of nitrogen fertilizer. To investigate multispecies mixtures as an alternative strategy, the 26-site international ‘LegacyNet’ experiment systematically varied the diversity of sown grasslands using up to six high-yielding forage species (grasses, legumes, and herbs), managed under moderate nitrogen inputs. Multispecies mixtures outyielded two widely used grassland practices: a grass monoculture with higher nitrogen fertilizer, and a two-species grass-legume community. High yields in multispecies mixtures were driven by strong positive grass-legume and legume-herb interactions. In warmer sites, the yield advantage of legume-containing multispecies mixtures over monocultures and the high-nitrogen grass increased. Improved design of grassland mixtures can inform more environmentally sustainable forage production and may enhance adaptation of productive grasslands to a warming climate.
License
Other
Open access date
December 4, 2025