A size-gradient hypothesis for alpine treeline ecotones
Authored by George P Malanson, Lynn M Resler
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1007/s11629-016-3984-5
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Research on the stress gradient hypothesis recognizes that positive
(i.e. facilitative) and negative (i.e. competitive) plant interactions
change in intensity and effect relative to abiotic stress experienced on
a gradient. Motivated by observations of alpine treeline ecotones, we
suggest that this switch in interaction could operate along a gradient
of relative size of individual plants. We propose that as neighbors
increase in size relative to a focal plant they improve the environment
for that plant up to a critical point. After this critical point is
surpassed, however, increasing relative size of neighbors will degrade
the environment such that the net interaction intensity becomes
negative. We developed a conceptual (not site or species specific)
individual based model to simulate a single species with recruitment, growth, and mortality dependent on the environment mediated by the
relative size of neighbors. Growth and size form a feedback. Simulation
results show that the size gradient model produces metrics similar to
that of a stress gradient model. Visualizations reveal that the size
gradient model produces spatial patterns that are similar to the complex
ones observed at alpine treelines. Size-mediated interaction could be a
mechanism of the stress gradient hypothesis or it could operate
independent of abiotic stress.
Tags
Competition
Facilitation
Mortality
Model
Communities
Growth forms
Spatial-pattern
Stress-gradient
Plant interactions
Shrub