Nurse plant effects on plant species richness in drylands: The role of grazing, rainfall and species specificity

被引:59
|
作者
Soliveres, Santiago [1 ,2 ]
Eldridge, David J. [1 ]
Hemmings, Frank [1 ]
Maestre, Fernando T. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ New S Wales, Sch Biol Earth & Environm Sci, Evolut & Ecol Res Ctr, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia
[2] Univ Rey Juan Carlos, Escuela Super Ciencias Expt & Tecnol, Dept Biol & Geol, Area Biodiversidad & Conservac, Mostoles 28933, Spain
基金
欧洲研究理事会;
关键词
Competition; Diversity; Facilitation; Open woodland; Stress-gradient hypothesis; STRESS-GRADIENT HYPOTHESIS; POSITIVE INTERACTIONS; MICROHABITAT AMELIORATION; SEEDLING ESTABLISHMENT; UNDERSTOREY PLANTS; FUNCTIONAL TRAITS; CONSUMER PRESSURE; SPATIAL-PATTERNS; TREE SAPLINGS; FACILITATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.ppees.2012.09.003
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
The outcome of plant-plant interactions depends on environmental (e.g. grazing and climatic conditions) and species-specific attributes (e.g. life strategy and dispersal mode of the species involved). However, the joint effects of such factors on pairwise plant-plant interactions, and how they modulate the role of these interactions at the community level, have not been addressed before. We assessed how these species-specific (life strategy and dispersal) and environmental (grazing and rainfall) factors affected the co-occurrence of 681 plant species pairs on open woodlands in south-eastern Australia. Species-specific attributes affected the co-occurrence of most species pairs, with higher co-occurrence levels dominating for drought-intolerant species. The dispersal mechanism only affected drought-tolerant beneficiaries, with more positive co-occurrences for vertebrate-dispersed species. Conversely, the percentage of facilitated species at the community scale declined under higher rainfall availabilities. A significant grazing x rainfall interaction on the percentage of facilitated species suggests that grazing-mediated protection was important under low to moderate, but not high, rainfall availabilities. This study improves our ability to predict changes in plant-plant interactions along environmental gradients, and their effect on community species richness, by highlighting that: (1) species-specific factors were more important than environmental conditions as drivers of a large amount (similar to 37%) of the pairwise co-occurrences evaluated; (2) grazing and rainfall interaction drive the co-occurrence among different species in the studied communities, and (3) the effect of nurse plants on plant species richness will depend on the relative dominance of particular dispersal mechanisms or life strategies prone to be facilitated. (C) 2012 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:402 / 410
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Plant Species Richness and Ecosystem Multifunctionality in Global Drylands
    Maestre, Fernando T.
    Quero, Jose L.
    Gotelli, Nicholas J.
    Escudero, Adrian
    Ochoa, Victoria
    Delgado-Baquerizo, Manuel
    Garcia-Gomez, Miguel
    Bowker, Matthew A.
    Soliveres, Santiago
    Escolar, Cristina
    Garcia-Palacios, Pablo
    Berdugo, Miguel
    Valencia, Enrique
    Gozalo, Beatriz
    Gallardo, Antonio
    Aguilera, Lorgio
    Arredondo, Tulio
    Blones, Julio
    Boeken, Bertrand
    Bran, Donaldo
    Conceicao, Abel A.
    Cabrera, Omar
    Chaieb, Mohamed
    Derak, Mchich
    Eldridge, David J.
    Espinosa, Carlos I.
    Florentino, Adriana
    Gaitan, Juan
    Gatica, M. Gabriel
    Ghiloufi, Wahida
    Gomez-Gonzalez, Susana
    Gutierrez, Julio R.
    Hernandez, Rosa M.
    Huang, Xuewen
    Huber-Sannwald, Elisabeth
    Jankju, Mohammad
    Miriti, Maria
    Monerris, Jorge
    Mau, Rebecca L.
    Morici, Ernesto
    Naseri, Kamal
    Ospina, Abelardo
    Polo, Vicente
    Prina, Anibal
    Pucheta, Eduardo
    Ramirez-Collantes, David A.
    Romao, Roberto
    Tighe, Matthew
    Torres-Diaz, Cristian
    Val, James
    SCIENCE, 2012, 335 (6065) : 214 - 218
  • [2] Comment on "Plant Species Richness and Ecosystem Multifunctionality in Global Drylands"
    Jucker, Tommaso
    Coomes, David A.
    SCIENCE, 2012, 337 (6091)
  • [3] Response to Comment on "Plant Species Richness and Ecosystem Multifunctionality in Global Drylands"
    Maestre, Fernando T.
    Soliveres, Santiago
    Gotelli, Nicholas J.
    Quero, Jose L.
    Berdugo, Miguel
    SCIENCE, 2012, 337 (6091)
  • [4] Ant and plant species richness in relation to grazing, fertilisation and topography
    Pihlgren, Aina
    Lenoir, Lisette
    Dahms, Henriette
    JOURNAL FOR NATURE CONSERVATION, 2010, 18 (02) : 118 - 125
  • [5] Effects of woody plant species richness on mammal species richness in southern Africa
    Qian, Hong
    Kissling, W. Daniel
    Wang, Xianli
    Andrews, Peter
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2009, 36 (09) : 1685 - 1697
  • [6] Effects of extreme rainfall events are independent of plant species richness in an experimental grassland community
    Francisco M. Padilla
    Liesje Mommer
    Hannie de Caluwe
    Annemiek E. Smit-Tiekstra
    Eric J. W. Visser
    Hans de Kroon
    Oecologia, 2019, 191 : 177 - 190
  • [7] Effects of extreme rainfall events are independent of plant species richness in an experimental grassland community
    Padilla, Francisco M.
    Mommer, Liesje
    de Caluwe, Hannie
    Smit-Tiekstra, Annemiek E.
    Visser, Eric J. W.
    de Kroon, Hans
    OECOLOGIA, 2019, 191 (01) : 177 - 190
  • [8] Relationships between plant species richness and grazing intensity in a semiarid ecosystem
    Fulbright, Timothy E.
    Ortega-Santos, J. Alfonso
    Hines, Stacy L.
    Drabek, Dillan J.
    Saenz, Ramon
    Campbell, Tyler A.
    Hewitt, David G.
    Wester, David B.
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2023, 13 (11):
  • [9] ForumCalcium and plant species richness
    Tomáš Herben
    Milan Chytrý
    Folia Geobotanica, 2003, 38 : 355 - 355
  • [10] Calcium and plant species richness
    Herben, T
    Chytry, M
    FOLIA GEOBOTANICA, 2003, 38 (04) : 355 - 355