Competition among plants can lead to an increase in aggregation of smaller plants around larger ones
Authored by Yoshiaki Nakagawa, Masayuki Yokozawa, Toshihiko Hara
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2015.01.014
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Abstract
We re-examined traditional explanations regarding relationships between
competition among plants and spatial patterns. We focused particularly
on the prevailing view, which is that competition between smaller plants
and larger plants serves only as a repulsive force between neighbors, and always decreases the degree of aggregation between smaller plants
and larger plants over time. We propose an alternative underlying
mechanism explaining the observed spatial patterns using a spatially
explicit, individualbased model with general assumptions regarding the
nature of competition among plants. We statistically estimated
parameters for the model from observed census data collected over 30
years in an even-aged experimental fir forest (Abies sachalinensis). The
results of our simulations, based on field data, indicated that
asymmetric competition among plants led to the aggregation of smaller
plants around a larger plant (i.e., not toward a uniform spatial
pattern). This spatial pattern was generated by the growth suppression
of plants near larger plants during the early growth stages, and more
importantly, by the existence of a zone with lower competition intensity
(referred to as competition-induced shelter, CiS) around a larger plant
after the early growth stages. Larger plants compete for resources with
large and medium-sized neighbors to the extent that the neighbors die
and are removed, resulting in CiS. The results also indicate that
competition between smaller plants and larger plants in an even-aged
population exerts not only the traditionally recognized repulsive force
but also a pseudo-attractive force, such as CiS, which promotes
aggregation of smaller plants around a larger plant. (C) 2015 Elsevier
B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Dynamics
Mortality
Model
interference
growth
Asymmetry
Populations
Spatial-patterns
Forest stands
Size-structure