Plant-plant facilitation increases with reduced phylogenetic relatedness along an elevation gradient

Duarte, Milen; Verdu, Miguel; Cavieres, Lohengrin A.; Bustamante, Ramiro O.

Abstract

Environmental conditions can modify the intensity and sign of ecological interactions. The stress gradient hypothesis (SGH) predicts that facilitation becomes more important than competition under stressful conditions. To properly test this hypothesis, it is necessary to account for all (not a subset of) interactions occurring in the communities and consider that species do not interact at random but following a specific pattern. We aim to assess elevational changes in facilitation, in terms of species richness, frequency and intensity of the interaction as a function of the evolutionary relatedness between nurses and their associated species. We sampled nurse and their facilitated plant species in two 1000-2000 m. elevation gradients in Mediterranean Chile where low temperature imposes a mortality filter on seedlings. We first estimated the relative importance of facilitation as a mechanism adding new species to communities distributed along these gradients. We then tested whether the frequency and intensity of facilitation increases with elevation, taking into account the evolutionary relatedness of the nurse species and the facilitated species.

Más información

Título según WOS: Plant-plant facilitation increases with reduced phylogenetic relatedness along an elevation gradient
Título de la Revista: OIKOS
Volumen: 130
Número: 2
Editorial: WILEY-BLACKWELL
Fecha de publicación: 2021
Página de inicio: 248
Página final: 259
DOI:

10.1111/OIK.07680

Notas: ISI