Reversed effects of grazing on plant diversity: the role of below-ground competition and size symmetry
Authored by Volker Grimm, Florian Jeltsch, Felix May
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0706.2009.17724.x
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Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Grazing is known as one of the key factors for diversity and community
composition in grassland ecosystems, but the response of plant
communities towards grazing varies remarkably between sites with
different environmental conditions. It is generally accepted that
grazing increases plant diversity in productive environments, while it
tends to reduce diversity in unproductive habitats (grazing reversal
hypothesis). Despite empirical evidence for this pattern the mechanistic
link between modes of plant-plant competition and grazing response at
the community level still remains poorly understood. Root-competition in
particular has rarely been included in theoretical studies, although it
has been hypothesized that variations in productivity and grazing regime
can alter the relative importance of shoot- and root-competition. We
therefore developed an individual-based model based on plant functional
traits to investigate the response of a grassland community towards
grazing. Models of different complexity, either incorporating only shoot
competition or with distinct shoot- and root-competition, were used to
study the interactive effects of grazing, resource availability, and the
mode of competition (size-symmetric or asymmetric). The pattern
predicted by the grazing reversal hypothesis (GRH) can only be explained
by our model if shoot- and root-competition are explicitly considered
and if size asymmetry of above- and symmetry of below-ground competition
is assumed. For this scenario, the model additionally reproduced
empirically observed plant trait responses: erect and large plant
functional types (PFTs) dominated without grazing, while frequent
grazing favoured small PFTs with a rosette growth form. We conclude that
interactions between shoot- and root-competition and size
symmetry/asymmetry of plant-plant interactions are crucial in order to
understand grazing response under different habitat productivities. Our
results suggest that future empirical trait surveys in grassland
communities should include root traits, which have been largely ignored
in previous studies, in order to improve predictions of plants'
responses to grazing.
Tags
Coexistence
Model
Mechanisms
Trade-off
Disturbance
Community structure
Species-diversity
Environmental variability
Traits
Grassland plants