FACILITATION BETWEEN HIGHER-PLANT SPECIES IN A SEMIARID ENVIRONMENT

Citation
Fi. Pugnaire et al., FACILITATION BETWEEN HIGHER-PLANT SPECIES IN A SEMIARID ENVIRONMENT, Ecology, 77(5), 1996, pp. 1420-1426
Citations number
50
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00129658
Volume
77
Issue
5
Year of publication
1996
Pages
1420 - 1426
Database
ISI
SICI code
0012-9658(1996)77:5<1420:FBHSIA>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
A major role of facilitation between higher plant species, particularl y in stressful environments, has recently been reported in several pap ers that suggest that beneficial interactions could be more important in the dynamics of plant communities than has been recognized to date. In a semiarid region in southeastern Spain we determined the effect o f a leguminous shrub, Retama sphaerocarpa, on its environment, testing the hypothesis that facilitation by the shrub of one species of its u nderstory, Marrubium vulgare, is reciprocal and that the shrub benefit s from sheltering herbs beneath its canopy. Marrubium plants under Ret ama had greater specific leaf area, leaf mass, shoot mass, leaf area, more flowers, a higher nitrogen (N) concentration in leaf tissue, and more N per plant than isolated plants, suggesting a facilitative effec t of Retama on Marrubium including increased availability of resources . Biomass of 1-yr-old cladodes, total biomass, total nitrogen content of 3-yr-old branches, and shoot water potential at midday were higher for Retama shrubs with Marrubium beneath them than in shrubs without M arrubium. Retama strongly improved its own environment, facilitated th e growth of Marrubium and other species underneath its canopy, and at the same time obtained benefits from sheltering herbs underneath. The interaction between these two species was indirect, associated with di fferences in soil properties and with improved nutrient availability u nder shrubs compared with plants growing on their own. We propose that the mutual benefit of the association between Retama and Marrubium is best termed a facultative mutualism. Each partner benefits from great er availability of resources in the ''island of fertility'' that resul ts from their association. If beneficial plant-plant interactions as d escribed here are widespread, positive relationships may have a major role in determining the pattern and structure of plant communities.