A complex network of interactions controls coexistence and relative abundances in Patagonian grass-shrub steppes
Authored by Thorsten Wiegand, Pablo A Cipriotti, Jose M Paruelo, Martin R Aguiar
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2745.12246
Sponsors:
European Research Council (ERC)
Argentine Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The coexistence of shrubs and grasses has intrigued ecologists for the
past century, and the conundrum of shrub-grass coexistence is at the
core of debates on the functioning of semi-arid ecosystems. Here, we
explored how the interplay of root competition and facilitation between
life-forms at different life stages and demographic bottlenecks controls
the long-term coexistence of multiple shrub and grass species in
semi-arid Patagonian steppes.
We used the spatially explicit and individual-based simulation model
DINVEG that integrates the abundant information on the semi-arid
Patagonian grass-shrub steppes to test six competing hypotheses on the
mechanisms that govern the coexistence and relative abundances of
several grass and shrub species. The structurally realistic model allows
for a direct comparison of model outputs with a wide range of previously
collected field data.
We formulate three competing hypotheses on vertical root overlap between
grasses and shrubs (no overlap, partial overlap, full overlap) that were
crosses with two hypotheses on asymmetric shrub-grass facilitation (with
and without). Each of the six variants of DINVEG were tested in their
ability to generate dynamics in accordance with detailed field data, and
we performed global sensitivity analyses to reveal demographic
bottlenecks and controls.
The hypothesis combining partial vertical root overlap with no
facilitation was the most likely hypothesis given the data. It created
demographic bottlenecks in recruitment and emergence that controlled
grass and shrub abundances, respectively, and only this hypothesis
generated a situation where grasses controlled shrub abundances (by
limiting shrub recruitment), but where grass abundance was only weakly
controlled by shrubs. Internal water dynamics generated reduced
competition of shrubs to neighboured grasses that was sufficient to
produce the observed ring of grasses around shrubs, and most of the
parameterizations that approximated the observed species-specific
abundances were able to reproduce the observed equilibrated spatial
patterns of the mature community.
Synthesis. We found a complex network of mechanisms that controlled
growth-form coexistence and relative abundances in the Patagonian
grass-shrub steppe where both, demographic bottlenecks and species
interactions across life-forms, species and life stages were important.
Our study points to alternative mechanisms of shrub-grass coexistence
that may play an important role in dry grasslands and steppes where fire
and herbivory are not key drivers and provide an avenue to detect them.
Tags
Competition
Dynamics
Facilitation
Simulation-models
Soil-water availability
Patch structure
Aboveground
production
Seed distribution
Arid steppe
Savannas