PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Increasing plant diversity in agricultural grasslands boosts yields, reducing reliance on fertilizer

2025-12-04
(Press-News.org)

Higher plant diversity in agricultural grasslands increases yields with lower inputs of nitrogen fertiliser. That is the headline finding of a landmark, international study led by Trinity College Dublin that paints a promising picture for more sustainable agriculture.

And in further good news, the research shows that under warmer temperatures, the yield benefits of more diverse grasslands further increase. This highlights the climate adaptation potential of multispecies mixtures in an era where the global climate crisis is driving rising temperatures in many countries.

The research, published today in leading journal Science, outlines the findings of a common experiment conducted across 26 international sites that spanned a wide gradient of temperate climates and local conditions. The “LegacyNet” sites include some in Ireland, as well as others in Europe – from Denmark to Italy, and the Netherlands to the Czech Republic – and further afield, from China to the US, Canada and New Zealand. 

Sown productive grasslands (used to supply forage for livestock or as a ley in a crop rotation) typically comprise low species diversity. Two widely used grassland practices comprise 1) a single grass species (monoculture) managed with high inputs of synthetic nitrogen fertiliser, and 2) a two-species grass-legume combination that receives lower inputs of nitrogen fertiliser.

In this study, the researchers considered whether adding more species (up to two grasses, two legumes, and two herbs) to these grasslands and creating ‘multispecies mixtures’ could maintain or improve yields while reducing the reliance of nitrogen fertilisers that have negative environmental impacts. 

The results showed that multispecies mixtures achieved high yields due to strong grass-legume and legume-herb synergistic interactions – the yield of the mixtures was much greater than the sum of the parts.

Sowing two grasses, two legumes and two herbs each in approximately equal proportions can optimise yield and nitrogen-saving benefits  The six-species multispecies mixture produced on average 12.3 tonnes per hectare per growing season, representing an 11% increase in yield compared to the grass monoculture that had more than double the nitrogen fertiliser, and an 18% increase in yield compared to the two-species grass-legume combination. 

This confirms that multispecies mixtures outperform two widely used conventional practices in agricultural grasslands. 

Caroline Brophy, Professor in Statistics in Trinity College Dublin’s School of Computer Science and Statistics, is senior author of the research. She said: “We urgently need to make agricultural grasslands more sustainable, but at the same time it is crucial that these systems maintain or improve agronomic performance and can adapt to changing climates. This is an internationally relevant issue as agricultural grasslands are globally distributed, economically important and threatened by the climate crisis. 

“The big-picture message from this work is that transitioning to multispecies mixtures in agricultural grasslands can drive more environmentally sustainable forage production, improve yields, and enhance adaptation to a warming climate. That’s a win-win-win.”

James O’Malley, PhD Candidate in Trinity’s School of Computer Science and Statistics, is the first author of the research. He added: “A major strength of our study lies in the broad geographic and climatic spread of sites in our experimental design, which spanned 26 different locations across Europe, North America, China and New Zealand.” 

“Having a common experiment at many sites enhances our statistical power and greatly improves the generality of our results. Statistical models applied to our multi-site data showed that sowing two grasses, two legumes and two herbs in equal proportions was a reliable strategy for delivering high yields across sites, and the yield benefits of multispecies mixtures compared to less diverse grasslands were even stronger under warmer climates.” 

Dr John Finn, Senior Researcher at Teagasc, is a leading co-author of the research and said: “Across a variety of sites and environmental conditions, our study shows conclusively that six-species multispecies mixtures are not only better yielding than grass monocultures with higher inputs of nitrogen fertiliser, but they also outyield combinations of perennial ryegrass and white clover.” 

“This research provides farmers with the knowledge to better design grassland leys (2-3 year duration) by sowing approximately equal proportions of grasses, legumes and herbs. For longer term grasslands, it shows the high potential benefit of grassland management strategies to maintain those proportions over time. Ultimately, we show that multispecies mixtures deliver more yield from less nitrogen fertiliser.”

This research is part of the “LegacyNet” network of researchers which was founded and is co-Directed by Professor Caroline Brophy, Dr John Finn and Dr Carsten Malisch, a tenure-track Assistant Professor at Aarhus University, Denmark; support for LegacyNet was provided by the institutions of all participating member sites. 

Notes to Editor

A major strength and novelty of the LegacyNet experiment is its scale – the same experiment was conducted at 26 different locations across Europe, North America, China and New Zealand. It is highly unusual to have a common experiment coordinated across so many locations. The team tested the research questions across this wide gradient of climatic conditions, varying management practices and local soil conditions. The ability to generalise the key results on account of this scale is part of why the research is published in the prestigious journal Science.

Why, where and how did it all begin?

The LegacyNet Founders and Directors are Professor Caroline Brophy (Trinity College Dublin, Ireland), Dr John Finn (Teagasc, Ireland) and Dr Carsten Malisch (Aarhus University, Denmark). This trio – a statistician, an ecologist and an agronomist – shared a vision over several years. They believed that multispecies mixtures could potentially provide a key solution to improving the performance and sustainability of agricultural grasslands. By then, there had been no wide-scale testing of their hypothesis, and it was crucial that a large-scale study be set up to provide farmers with the knowledge that they would need to sow multispecies mixtures with confidence. The first LegacyNet experiment got underway at Teagasc, Johnstown Castle in Co. Wexford, Ireland and the LegacyNet Directors set about recruiting members to share their vision by implementing the same experiment. And so LegacyNet was born! Today, the membership of LegacyNet boasts researchers from many leading agricultural and ecological institutions from across multiple continents.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Scientists uncover a new role for DNA loops in repairing genetic damage

2025-12-04
When DNA breaks, cells must repair it accurately to prevent harmful mutations. Researchers have discovered that during a key repair process called homologous recombination, the cell uses loops in its DNA structure to speed up the search for an intact copy of the damaged region. These loops act like shortcuts, allowing the repair machinery to scan along the chromosome in a directed way rather than randomly. This finding, published today in Science, reveals an unexpected function for chromatin loops—not just in organizing the genome, but also in helping maintain its integrity. “Homologous recombination is a key DNA repair process often linked to cancer, but ...

AI chatbots can effectively sway voters – in either direction

2025-12-04
ITHACA, N.Y. -- A short interaction with a chatbot can meaningfully shift a voter’s opinion about a presidential candidate or proposed policy in either direction, new Cornell University research finds. The potential for artificial intelligence to affect election results is a major public concern. Two new papers – with experiments conducted in four countries – demonstrate that chatbots powered by large language models (LLMs) are quite effective at political persuasion, moving opposition voters’ preferences ...

Study reveals 'levers' driving the political persuasiveness of AI chatbots

2025-12-04
Even small, open-source AI chatbots can be effective political persuaders, according to a new study. The findings provide a comprehensive empirical map of the mechanisms behind AI political persuasion, revealing that post-training and prompting – not model scale and personalization – are the dominant levers. It also reveals evidence of a persuasion-accuracy tradeoff, reshaping how policymakers and researchers should conceptualize the risks of persuasive AI. There is a growing concern amongst many that advances in AI – particularly conversational ...

'Tiny' tyrannosaurid, Nanotyrannus lancensis, was a distinctive species, not juvenile T. Rex

2025-12-04
Microscopic analysis of an unconventional throat bone helps resolve a long-standing debate in paleontology, researchers report, revealing evidence that Nanotyrannus lancensis – long thought by many to be a teenage Tyrannosaurus rex – was in fact a fully mature, distinct species of smaller tyrannosaurid. Because the fossil record is often fragmentary, it is difficult to discern the full range of distinct dinosaur species that lived in ancient ecosystems. This is made more challenging when trying to determine true new species from juveniles of known ones. One of the most ...

Scientists capture first detailed look inside droplet-like structures of compacted DNA

2025-12-04
Inside human cells, biology has pulled off the ultimate packing job, figuring out how to fit six feet of DNA into a nucleus about one-tenth as wide as a human hair while making sure the all-important molecules can still function. To compress itself, DNA wraps around proteins to form nucleosomes that are linked together like beads on a string. These strings coil into compact chromatin fibers, which are further condensed inside the nucleus. It was unclear how this additional compaction process happened. Then, in 2019, HHMI Investigator Michael Rosen and his team at UT Southwestern Medical Center reported that synthetic nucleosomes created ...

Return of the short (tyrant) king: A new paper by Dinosaur Institute researcher shows Nanotyrannus was not a juvenile T. Rex

2025-12-04
Los Angeles, CA (December 4, 2025)—For decades, paleontologists argued over the lone skull used to establish the distinct species Nanotyrannus. Was it truly a separate species or simply a juvenile Tyrannosaurus rex? A new paper published in Science has definitively shown that Nanotyrannus is, in fact, nearly fully grown and not an immature T. rex, at the same time revealing new insights into how these giant predators achieved such terrifying sizes so quickly.  A multi-institutional team, including Dinosaur Institute Postdoctoral Fellow, Dr. Zach Morris, examined the much-debated Nanotyrannus holotype—the specimen used to name ...

New study confirms Nanotyrannus holotype was distinct species from T. rex

2025-12-04
New study confirms Nanotyrannus holotype was diminutive, distinct species from T. rex New research from a team including the University of Nebraska State Museum’s Ashley Poust further moves a decades-long scientific debate toward a conclusion — the Nanotyrannus, a teacup variation of the T. rex, did exist. Poust and the team, led by Christopher Griffin of Princeton University, used a novel approach to determine maturity of the holotype of Nanotyrannus, a fossil skull at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History. They examined the ceratobranchial, or hyoid bone, which was intact with the skull, and determined it was an adult when it ...

Carnegie Science names Michael Blanton 12th Observatories Director

2025-12-04
Astronomer Michael R. Blanton will join the Carnegie Science Observatories as its 12th director, overseeing astronomical research in Pasadena and telescope operations at Las Campanas Observatory in Chile, one of the world’s elite observing sites. Blanton joins Carnegie Science from New York University, where he is a Professor of Physics and the Director of the Center for Cosmology and Particle Physics. He succeeds John Mulchaey, who was named Carnegie Science President in late 2024. Blanton’s research has centered primarily on conducting large astronomical surveys to place ...

From mice to humans in five years: Microglia replacement paving the way for neurodegenerative disease therapies

2025-12-04
Tiny charming immune cells called microglia protect the central nervous system (CNS) in a multitude of ways: They provide innate immunity, shape neurodevelopment, maintain homeostasis and modulate neurological disorders. That functionality can be lost, however, when microglia acquire mutations. An concept to correct this by replacing the mutated microglia with genetically typical cells — now called microglia intervention strategy for therapy and enhancement by replacement, or MISTER — emerged five years ago and was successfully achieved in mice. This year, researchers successfully used the approach to halt a fatal neurological ...

To treat long COVID, we must learn from historical chronic illnesses, medical researchers say

2025-12-04
In a paper publishing in the Cell Press journal Trends in Immunology on December 4, scientists and doctors highlight the importance of studying long COVID in the context of other post-acute infection syndromes or chronic illnesses. By analyzing historical accounts of other epidemics, they say, researchers can gain important perspective on the profound effects of these chronic illnesses—with the goal of informing ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

How sound moves on Mars

Increasing plant diversity in agricultural grasslands boosts yields, reducing reliance on fertilizer

Scientists uncover a new role for DNA loops in repairing genetic damage

AI chatbots can effectively sway voters – in either direction

Study reveals 'levers' driving the political persuasiveness of AI chatbots

'Tiny' tyrannosaurid, Nanotyrannus lancensis, was a distinctive species, not juvenile T. Rex

Scientists capture first detailed look inside droplet-like structures of compacted DNA

Return of the short (tyrant) king: A new paper by Dinosaur Institute researcher shows Nanotyrannus was not a juvenile T. Rex

New study confirms Nanotyrannus holotype was distinct species from T. rex

Carnegie Science names Michael Blanton 12th Observatories Director

From mice to humans in five years: Microglia replacement paving the way for neurodegenerative disease therapies

To treat long COVID, we must learn from historical chronic illnesses, medical researchers say

Volcanic eruptions set off a chain of events that brought the Black Death to Europe

Environmental science: Volcanic activity may have brought the Black Death to medieval Europe

Public trust in scientists for cancer information across political ideologies in the US

Adverse experiences, protective factors, and obesity in Latinx and Hispanic youths

Researchers identify bacterial enzyme that can cause fatal heart conditions with pneumonia infections

Single enzyme failure found to drive neuron loss in dementia

Sudden cardiac death risk falls in colorectal cancer, but disparities persist

From lab to clinic: CU Anschutz launches Phase 1 clinical trial of promising combination therapy for resistant ovarian cancer

Renuka Iyer, MD, named new Chief Medical Officer for National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN)

New organ-on-a-chip platform allows the testing of cancer vaccine efficacy in aging populations

No, we don't need more and more data about nature. We need more people to use the data

Research explores effect of parental depression symptoms on children’s reward processing

Phonetic or morpholexical issues? New study reveals L2 French ambiguity

Seeing inside smart gels: scientists capture dynamic behavior under stress

Korea University researchers create hydrogel platform for high-throughput extracellular vesicle isolation

Pusan National University researchers identify the brain enzyme that drives nicotine addiction and smoking dependence

Pathway discovered to make the most common breast cancer tumor responsive to immunotherapy

Air pollution linked to more severe heart disease

[Press-News.org] Increasing plant diversity in agricultural grasslands boosts yields, reducing reliance on fertilizer