Positive interactions can increase size inequality in plant populations
Authored by Sa Xiao, Gang Wang, Jacob Weiner, Fernando T Maestre, Cheng-Jin Chu, You-Shi Wang, Qi Li, Jian-Li Yuan, Lu-Qiang Zhao, Zheng-Wei Ren
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2745.2009.01562.x
Sponsors:
Chinese National Natural Science Foundation
European Social Fund
Research Fund for the Doctoral Program of Higher Education of China
Spanish Ministry for Science and Innovation (MICNN)
British Ecological Society
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
P> Large variation in the size of individuals is a ubiquitous feature of
natural plant populations. While the role of competition in generating
this variation has been studied extensively, the potential effects of
positive interactions among plants, which are common in high-stress
environments, have not been investigated.
Using an individual-based `zone-of-influence' model, we investigate the
effects of competition, abiotic stress and facilitation on size
inequality in plant monocultures. In the model, stress reduces the
growth rate of plants, and facilitation ameliorates the effects of
stress. Both facilitation and competition occur in overlapping zones of
influence. We tested some of the model's predictions with a field
experiment using the clonal grass Elymus nutans in an alpine meadow.
Facilitation increased the size inequality of model populations when
there was no density-dependent mortality. This effect decreased with
density as competition overwhelmed facilitation. The lowest size
inequality was found at intermediate densities both with the model and
in the field.
When density-dependent mortality was included in the model, stress
delayed its onset and reduced its rate by reducing growth rates, so the
number of survivors at any point in time was higher under harsh than
under more benign conditions. Facilitation increased size inequality
during self-thinning.
Synthesis. Our results demonstrate that facilitation interacts with
abiotic stress and competition to influence the degree of size
inequality in plant populations. Facilitation increased size inequality
at low to intermediate densities and during self-thinning.
Tags
Competition
China
Facilitation
growth
Variability
Communities
Symmetry
Monocultures
Spring wheat
Biomass-density relationships