Plant diversity in experimental systems often enhances ecosystem productivity, but the mechanisms causing this overyielding are only partly understood. Intercropping faba beans (Vicia faba L.) and maize (Zea mays L.) result in overyielding and also, enhanced nodulation by faba beans. By using permeable and impermeable root barriers in a 2-y field experiment, we show that root-root interactions between faba bean and maize significantly increase both nodulation and symbiotic N 2 fixation in intercropped faba bean. Furthermore, root exudates from maize promote faba bean nodulation, whereas root exudates from wheat and barley do not. Thus, a decline of soil nitrate concentrations caused by intercropped cereals is not the sole mechanism for maize promoting faba bean nodulation. Intercropped maize also caused a twofold increase in exudation of flavonoids (signaling compounds for rhizobia) in the systems. Roots of faba bean treated with maize root exudates exhibited an immediate 11-fold increase in the expression of chalcone-flavanone isomerase (involved in flavonoid synthesis) gene together with a significantly increased expression of genes mediating nodulation and auxin response. After 35 d, faba beans treated with maize root exudate continued to show up-regulation of key nodulation genes, such as early nodulin 93 (ENOD93), and promoted nitrogen fixation. Our results reveal a mechanism for how intercropped maize promotes nitrogen fixation of faba bean, where maize root exudates promote flavonoid synthesis in faba bean, increase nodulation, and stimulate nitrogen fixation after enhanced gene expression. These results indicate facilitative root-root interactions and provide a mechanism for a positive relationship between species diversity and ecosystem productivity.flavanoids | gene expression | intercropping | root-root interactions | signals M any ecosystems, including grasslands (1, 2), forests (3), phytoplankton communities (4), and cropping systems (5), show a positive relationship between plant diversity and ecosystem productivity. Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain this relationship. A "sampling effect" occurs, because more diverse mixtures have a higher probability of containing a species with higher productivity (6). Complementarity effects occur when species vary in resource use and niche differentiation in space or time, leading to greater resource utilization (6-9). Facilitation occurs when one species increases the growth of other species through a wide range of processes (10). Facilitative effects may be direct (e.g., by shade or protection from harsh conditions) or indirect (e.g., when one species reduces attack by pathogens or herbivores on other species) (11-13).Legume/cereal intercropping systems have been widely studied in the context of diversity and ecosystem function and commonly overyield, because dinitrogen (N 2 ) fixation by legumes increases ecosystem nitrogen (N) supply (7,8), an example of facilitation. This facilitation is important to agriculture on a large scale, because app...