Literature DB >> 26098340

Competition for light and nutrients in layered communities of aquatic plants.

Luuk P A van Gerven1, Jeroen J M de Klein, Daan J Gerla, Bob W Kooi, Jan J Kuiper, Wolf M Mooij.   

Abstract

Dominance of free-floating plants poses a threat to biodiversity in many freshwater ecosystems. Here we propose a theoretical framework to understand this dominance, by modeling the competition for light and nutrients in a layered community of floating and submerged plants. The model shows that at high supply of light and nutrients, floating plants always dominate due to their primacy for light, even when submerged plants have lower minimal resource requirements. The model also shows that floating-plant dominance cannot be an alternative stable state in light-limited environments but only in nutrient-limited environments, depending on the plants' resource consumption traits. Compared to unlayered communities, the asymmetry in competition for light-coincident with symmetry in competition for nutrients-leads to fundamentally different results: competition outcomes can no longer be predicted from species traits such as minimal resource requirements ([Formula: see text] rule) and resource consumption. Also, the same two species can, depending on the environment, coexist or be alternative stable states. When applied to two common plant species in temperate regions, both the model and field data suggest that floating-plant dominance is unlikely to be an alternative stable state.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26098340     DOI: 10.1086/681620

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Nat        ISSN: 0003-0147            Impact factor:   3.926


  3 in total

1.  A shady phytoplankton paradox: when phytoplankton increases under low light.

Authors:  Masato Yamamichi; Takehiro Kazama; Kotaro Tokita; Izumi Katano; Hideyuki Doi; Takehito Yoshida; Nelson G Hairston; Jotaro Urabe
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2018-07-04       Impact factor: 5.349

2.  Managing Successional Stage Heterogeneity to Maximize Landscape-Wide Biodiversity of Aquatic Vegetation in Ditch Networks.

Authors:  Sven Teurlincx; Michiel J J M Verhofstad; Elisabeth S Bakker; Steven A J Declerck
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2018-07-16       Impact factor: 5.753

3.  Shade tolerance as a key trait in invasion success of submerged macrophyte Cabomba caroliniana over Myriophyllum spicatum.

Authors:  Gergő Koleszár; Balázs András Lukács; Péter Tamás Nagy; Sándor Szabó
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2022-09-16       Impact factor: 3.167

  3 in total

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