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1.
Am J Bot ; 107(10): 1342-1354, 2020 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32978968

RESUMEN

PREMISE: In arid ecosystems, shrub facilitation is a critical process driving plant community structure and assembly, often resulting in increased densities of annual plants beneath shrub canopies. Pollinator-mediated interactions can have fitness consequences for both plant interactors but are largely unexplored as an indirect consequence of direct shrub-annual facilitation. METHODS: We tested the capacity of the geographically widespread creosote bush (Larrea tridentata) to influence pollinator visitation to its annual understory during its phenological shift into spring flowering. We used small video cameras to record pollinator visitation and foraging behavior on potted transplants of a representative flowering annual. We concurrently evaluated L. tridentata's positive role as a foundation plant in this system by measuring the associated plant and arthropod communities and deploying data loggers to measure understory microclimates. RESULTS: Pollinator visitation to the flowering annual desert dandelion, Malacothrix glabrata, was lower when beneath the canopy of L. tridentata, and further declined throughout the study site as L. tridentata entered full bloom. We confirmed the role of L. tridentata as a foundation species in this system through its concurrent, positive effects on annual plant cover (a proxy for biomass), the abundance and richness of the understory arthropod community and its ability to create stable microclimates. CONCLUSIONS: Direct and indirect shrub effects on other species function simultaneously to shift net outcomes even within predominantly net positive facilitation complexes.


Asunto(s)
Larrea , Biomasa , Clima Desértico , Ecosistema , Plantas
2.
PeerJ ; 3: e768, 2015.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25699214

RESUMEN

Empirical studies in salt marshes, arid, and alpine systems support the hypothesis that facilitation between plants is an important ecological process in severe or 'stressful' environments. Coastal dunes are both abiotically stressful and frequently disturbed systems. Facilitation has been documented, but the evidence to date has not been synthesized. We did a systematic review with meta-analysis to highlight general research gaps in the study of plant interactions in coastal dunes and examine if regional and local factors influence the magnitude of facilitation in these systems. The 32 studies included in the systematic review were done in coastal dunes located in 13 countries around the world but the majority was in the temperate zone (63%). Most of the studies adopt only an observational approach to make inferences about facilitative interactions, whereas only 28% of the studies used both observational and experimental approaches. Among the factors we tested, only geographic region mediates the occurrence of facilitation more broadly in coastal dune systems. The presence of a neighbor positively influenced growth and survival in the tropics, whereas in temperate and subartic regions the effect was neutral for both response variables. We found no evidence that climatic and local factors, such as life-form and life stage of interacting plants, affect the magnitude of facilitation in coastal dunes. Overall, conclusions about plant facilitation in coastal dunes depend on the response variable measured and, more broadly, on the geographic region examined. However, the high variability and the limited number of studies, especially in tropical region, indicate we need to be cautious in the generalization of the conclusions. Anyway, coastal dunes provide an important means to explore topical issues in facilitation research including context dependency, local versus regional drivers of community structure, and the importance of gradients in shaping the outcome of net interactions.

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