info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Resource partitioning and interactions enable coexistence in a grass-shrub steppe
Fecha
2010-10Registro en:
Cipriotti, Pablo Ariel; Aguiar, Martin Roberto; Resource partitioning and interactions enable coexistence in a grass-shrub steppe; Academic Press Ltd - Elsevier Science Ltd; Journal of Arid Environments; 74; 10; 10-2010; 1111-1120
0140-1963
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Cipriotti, Pablo Ariel
Aguiar, Martin Roberto
Resumen
We revisited a growth-form removal experiment after 12 years with the aim to compare the long-term population responses of three shrub species. Specifically, we were interested to know if the resource partitioning and plant interactions act as complementary mechanisms of the shrub-grass coexistence. In 1983 different plots from grass-shrub Patagonian steppes were submitted to three treatments: control, grass-, and shrub-removal during three consecutive years. In 1997 we studied nine plots from the original experiment and recorded all shrubs to compare shrub density, population size structure, vitality, spatial patterns and neighbourhood interferences of three native and co-dominant shrub species: Mulinum spinosum, Senecio filaginoides, and Adesmia volckmanni. After 12 years of recovery, shrubs as a growth-form group, fully re-established in plots where they were removed and attained 75% higher density in grass-removal plots than in control plots. However, long-term population responses of Mulinum, Senecio, and Adesmia to removals were distinctive. On the other hand, negative and positive interferences among shrub species and between shrubs and grasses generated a complex network. Morphological and functional differences in shrub and grass species and their interactions at population level and long-term could be a key to achieve a better comprehension of shrub-grass coexistence from semi-arid ecosystems. © 2010 Elsevier Ltd.