| Literature DB >> 24688848 |
Amanda R Liczner1, Christopher J Lortie1.
Abstract
Nurse plant facilitation is a commonly reported plant-plant interaction and is an important factor influencing community structure in stressful environments. Cushion plants are an example of alpine nurse plants that modify microclimatic conditions within their canopies to create favourable environments for other plants. In this meta-analysis, the facilitative effects of cushion plants was expanded from previous syntheses of the topic and the relative strength of facilitation for other plants and for arthropods were compared globally.The abundance, diversity, and species presence/absence effect size estimates were tested as plant responses to nurse plants and a composite measure was tested for arthropods. The strength of facilitation was on average three times greater for arthropods relative to all plant responses to cushions. Plant species presence, i.e., frequency of occurrence, was not enhanced by nurse-plants. Cushion plants nonetheless acted as nurse plants for both plants and arthropods in most alpine contexts globally, and although responses by other plant species currently dominate the facilitation literature, preliminary synthesis of the evidence suggests that the potential impacts of nurses may be even greater for other trophic levels.Entities:
Keywords: Arthropods; Cushion plants; Facilitation; Meta-analyses; Nurse plants
Year: 2014 PMID: 24688848 PMCID: PMC3940482 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.265
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Search terms used to select studies.
The search terms used in defining the scope of studies used in this meta-analyses of nurse-plant cushions on other plant species and arthropods. Asterisks were included in the search terms as a Boolean search strategy to identify word variations. Web of Knowledge was the tool used to secure the population of studies. Each workflow step of literature screening is described in details in the methods, but in short, step 1 — all studies, step 2 — duplicates removed and reported facilitation, and step 3 — useable data reported and sorted by response and taxa.
| Workflow | Search terms |
|
|
|
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|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cushion plant OR nurse plant AND facilitat* AND alpine OR arctic OR subarctic | 30 | 30 | 27 | 13 |
| 2 | Cushion plant OR nurse plant AND faciliatat* | 54 | 53 | 12 | 2 |
| 3 | Cushion plant | 529 | 349 | 13 | 1 |
Article selection criteria for inclusion in the meta-analysis.
A summary of all articles included in the meta-analysis of nurse-plant cushions on plants and arthropods. Details of data extraction listed in detail in the methods (N = 16, n = 662, n = 11).
| Authors | Location | Elevation (m.a.s.l.) | Cushion species | Taxa | Response variable |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | 00°28′ S, 78°09′ W | 4400, 4550, 4700 |
| Plants | Diversity, presence |
| ( | 50°48′ S, 73°10′ W | 700, 900 |
| Plants | Presence |
| ( | 33°S, 70°W | 3200, 3400, 3600 |
| Plants | Abundance |
| ( | 50°48′ S, 73°10′ W | 700, 900 |
| Plants | Abundance, diversity, presence |
| ( | 33°20′ S, 70°16′ W | 2800, 3200 |
| Plants | Diversity, presence |
| ( | 33°20′ S, 70°16′ W | 3200 |
| Plants | Abundance, presence |
| ( | 1900, 1600, 1900, 3200, |
| Plants | Diversity | |
| ( | 33°05′ N, 78°27′ E | 5900 |
| Plants | Presence |
| ( | 34°45′ N, 77°35′ E | 4840, 5000, 5100, 5300, |
| Plants | Diversity, presence |
| ( | 46°54′ S, 37°45′ E | 89, 97, 102 |
| Plants | Abundance |
| ( | 50°15′ N, 122°16′ W | 2160 |
| Plants and arthropods | Abundance, diversity |
| ( | 33°20′ S, 70°16′ W | 3200 | Arthropods | Abundance | |
| ( | 33°20′ S, 70°16′ W | 3200, 3580 |
| Plants | Abundance, diversity, presence |
| ( | 37°05′ N, 03°23′ W | 3240 |
| Plants | Abundance, diversity |
| ( | 46°31′ N, 09°43′ W | 3000 |
| Arthropods | Presence |
| ( | 28°20′ N, 99°05′ E | 4500, 4700 |
| Plants | Presence |
Figure 1PRISMA diagram describing the search protocol used for the meta-analysis.
PRISMA flow diagram depicting the search protocol and workflow in determining the effective population of studies for meta-analysis.
Figure 2Mean RII values for the effect of cushion plants on the abundance, diversity, and presence of other plant species.
The mean RII values for the effect of alpine cushion plants on the abundance, diversity, and species presence for other plants. Presence refers to presence/absence responses via associational pattern analyses in this literature. The bias-corrected 95% confidence intervals are shown.
Figure 3Composite mean RII values for plants, arthropods and the overall grand mean.
A contrast of the composite mean RII values for plants and arthropods. The overall or grand mean is the mean RII value for both plants and arthropods. The bias-corrected 95% confidence intervals are shown.