Literature DB >> 29345307

Competitive ability, stress tolerance and plant interactions along stress gradients.

Man Qi1, Tao Sun1, SuFeng Xue1, Wei Yang1, DongDong Shao1, Javier Martínez-López2.   

Abstract

Exceptions to the generality of the stress-gradient hypothesis (SGH) may be reconciled by considering species-specific traits and stress tolerance strategies. Studies have tested stress tolerance and competitive ability in mediating interaction outcomes, but few have incorporated this to predict how species interactions shift between competition and facilitation along stress gradients. We used field surveys, salt tolerance and competition experiments to develop a predictive model interspecific interaction shifts across salinity stress gradients. Field survey and greenhouse tolerance tests revealed tradeoffs between stress tolerance and competitive ability. Modeling showed that along salinity gradients, (1) plant interactions shifted from competition to facilitation at high salinities within the physiological limits of salt-intolerant plants, (2) facilitation collapsed when salinity stress exceeded the physiological tolerance of salt-intolerant plants, and (3) neighbor removal experiments overestimate interspecific facilitation by including intraspecific effects. A community-level field experiment, suggested that (1) species interactions are competitive in benign and, facilitative in harsh condition, but fuzzy under medium environmental stress due to niche differences of species and weak stress amelioration, and (2) the SGH works on strong but not weak stress gradients, so SGH confusion arises when it is applied across questionable stress gradients. Our study clarifies how species interactions vary along stress gradients. Moving forward, focusing on SGH applications rather than exceptions on weak or nonexistent gradients would be most productive.
© 2018 by the Ecological Society of America.

Entities:  

Keywords:  ecological theory; plant community; plant-plant interactions; process-based model; relative stress tolerance; salt marsh; stress-gradient hypothesis

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29345307     DOI: 10.1002/ecy.2147

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  4 in total

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Authors:  Caroline E Farrior
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2019-10-02       Impact factor: 5.349

Review 2.  The physicochemical approaches of altering growth and biochemical properties of medicinal plants in saline soils.

Authors:  Mohammad Miransari; Shirin Adham; Mahdiar Miransari; Arshia Miransari
Journal:  Appl Microbiol Biotechnol       Date:  2022-02-21       Impact factor: 4.813

3.  Niche separation and weak interactions in the high tidal zone of saltmarsh-mangrove mixing communities.

Authors:  Patrick Ndayambaje; Lili Wei; Tingfeng Zhang; Yuhong Li; Lin Liu; Xu Huang; Chaoxiang Liu
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2021-03-25       Impact factor: 2.912

4.  The salt secretion of leaves promotes the competitiveness of Reaumuria soongarica in a desert grassland.

Authors:  Chang-Shun Wang; Hui-Qing Wang; Wei Wang; Cun-Zhu Liang; Hua-Min Liu; Li-Xin Wang
Journal:  BMC Plant Biol       Date:  2022-02-25       Impact factor: 4.215

  4 in total

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