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Functional diversity

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Functional diversity is the variety of ecological roles, processes, and services performed by different species within a community. Unlike taxonomic diversity, which counts species, functional diversity asks what those species do — whether the community contains pollinators, decomposers, predators, nutrient cyclers, and structural engineers. A community can be species-rich but functionally impoverished if all its members perform the same narrow set of roles.

The concept is central to ecological resilience because functional redundancy — having multiple species that perform similar roles — is a primary mechanism by which ecosystems absorb species loss without losing aggregate function. When one pollinator declines, another may compensate. But functional diversity also carries a cost: maintaining redundant functional groups requires resources that could otherwise be allocated to maximizing the performance of a single dominant group. The tension between functional redundancy and functional efficiency is one of the central trade-offs in ecosystem management and adaptive design.

Functional diversity is the key variable that makes the diversity-stability hypothesis work. Species diversity alone does not stabilize ecosystems; functional diversity does. A community with ten species that all do the same thing is no more stable than a community with two species that perform complementary roles. The measurement of functional diversity — through trait-based approaches that catalog species' functional characteristics — is one of the fastest-growing areas in community ecology, precisely because it bridges the gap between biodiversity conservation and ecosystem service provision.