Positive and negative plant−plant interactions influence seedling establishment at both high and low elevations
Open access
Date
2023Type
- Journal Article
ETH Bibliography
yes
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Abstract
Deciphering how plants interact with each other across environmental gradients is important to understand plant community assembly, as well as potential future plant responses to environmental change. Plant−plant interactions are expected to shift from predominantly negative (i.e. competition) to predominantly positive (i.e. facilitation) along gradients of environmental severity. However, most experiments examine the net effects of interactions by growing plants in either the presence or absence of neighbours, thereby neglecting the interplay of both negative and positive effects acting simultaneously within communities. To partially unravel these effects, we tested how the seedling establishment of 10 mountain grassland plants varied in the presence versus absence of plant communities at two sites along an elevation gradient. We created a third experimental treatment (using plastic plant mats to mimic surrounding vegetation) that retained the main hypothesised benefits of plant neighbours (microsite amelioration), while reducing a key negative effect (competition for soil resources). In contrast to our expectations, we found evidence for net positive effects of vegetation at the low elevation site, and net negative effects at the high elevation site. Interestingly, the negative effects of plant neighbours at high elevation were driven by high establishment rates of low elevation grasses in bare soil plots. At both sites, establishment rates were highest in artificial vegetation (after excluding two low elevation grasses at the high elevation site), indicating that positive effects of above-ground vegetation are partially offset by their negative effects. Our results demonstrate that both competition and facilitation act jointly to affect community structure across environmental gradients, while emphasising that competition can be strong also at higher elevations in temperate mountain regions. Consequently, plant−plant interactions are likely to influence the establishment of new, and persistence of resident, species in mountain plant communities as environments change. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000646397Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Alpine BotanyPublisher
SpringerSubject
Facilitation; Competition; Stress gradient hypothesis; Vital rates; Range shiftOrganisational unit
09666 - Alexander, Jake (ehemalig) / Alexander, Jake (former)
09716 - Hille Ris Lambers, Janneke / Hille Ris Lambers, Janneke
Funding
193809 - Mechanisms underlying the success and impacts on biodiversity and ecosystem functioning of range-expanding species under climate change (RangeX) (SNF)
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ETH Bibliography
yes
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