Disentangling facilitation and seed dispersal from environmental heterogeneity as mechanisms generating associations between savanna plants

2011 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Disentangling facilitation and seed dispersal from environmental heterogeneity as mechanisms generating associations between savanna plants​
Schleicher, J.; Meyer, K. M. ; Wiegand, K. ; Schurr, F. M. & Ward, D. ​ (2011) 
Journal of Vegetation Science22(6) pp. 1038​-1048​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1654-1103.2011.01310.x 

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Authors
Schleicher, Jana; Meyer, Katrin M. ; Wiegand, Kerstin ; Schurr, Frank M.; Ward, David 
Abstract
Question: How can we disentangle facilitation and seed dispersal from environmental heterogeneity as mechanisms causing spatial associations of plant species? Location: Semi-arid savanna in the Kimberley Thorn Bushveld, South Africa. Methods: We developed a two-step protocol for the statistical differentiation of association-promoting mechanisms in plants based on the Acacia erioloba-Grewia flava association. Individuals of the savanna shrub G. flava and the tree A. erioloba were mapped on four study plots. Disentangling the mechanism causing the association of G. flava and A. erioloba involved tests of three spatial and one non-spatial null model. The spatial null models include homogeneous and heterogeneous Poisson processes for spatial randomness based on the bivariate spatial point patterns of the four plots. With the non-spatial analysis, we determined the relationship between the canopy diameter of A. erioloba trees and presence or absence of G. flava shrubs in the tree understorey to find whether shrub presence requires a minimum tree canopy diameter. Results: We first showed a significant positive spatial association of the two species. Thereafter, the non-spatial analysis supported an exclusion of environmental heterogeneity as the sole cause of this positive association. We found a minimum tree size under which no G. flava shrubs occurred. Conclusions: Our two-step analysis showed that it is unlikely that heterogeneous environmental conditions caused the spatial association of A. erioloba and G. flava. Instead, this association may have been caused by seed dispersal and/or facilitation (e.g. caused by hydraulic lift and/or nitrogen fixation by the host tree).
Issue Date
2011
Journal
Journal of Vegetation Science 
Organization
Fakultät für Forstwissenschaften und Waldökologie ; Büsgen-Institut ; Abteilung Ökosystemmodellierung 
ISSN
1100-9233
Language
English
Subject(s)
Acacia erioloba; Grewia flava; Plant interactions; Spatial association; Wiegand-Moloney O-ring statistics

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