Do species evenness and plant density influence the magnitude of selection and complementarity effects in annual plant species mixtures?

被引:120
作者
Polley, HW [1 ]
Wilsey, BJ
Derner, JD
机构
[1] ARS, Grassland Soil & Water Res Lab, USDA, Temple, TX 76502 USA
[2] Iowa State Univ, Dept Bot, Ames, IA 50012 USA
[3] ARS, High Plains Grasslands Res Stn, USDA, Cheyenne, WY 82009 USA
关键词
above-ground biomass; dominance; negative interactions; net biodiversity effect; niche differentiation; primary productivity; species diversity; species evenness; species richness;
D O I
10.1046/j.1461-0248.2003.00422.x
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Plant species richness influences primary productivity via mechanisms that (1) favour species with particular traits (selection effect) and (2) promote niche differentiation between species (complementarity). Influences of species evenness, plant density and other properties of plant communities on productivity are poorly defined, but may depend on whether selection or complementarity prevails in species mixtures. We predicted that selection effects are insensitive to species evenness but increase with plant density, and that the converse is true for complementarity. To test predictions, we grew three species of annuals in monocultures and in three-species mixtures in which evenness of established plants was varied at each of three plant densities in a cultivated field in Texas, USA. Above-ground biomass was smaller in mixtures than expected from monocultures because of negative 'complementarity' and a negative selection effect. Neither selection nor complementarity varied with species evenness, but selection effects increased at the greatest plant density as predicted.
引用
收藏
页码:248 / 256
页数:9
相关论文
共 34 条
[1]   The statistical inevitability of stability-diversity relationships in community ecology [J].
Doak, DF ;
Bigger, D ;
Harding, EK ;
Marvier, MA ;
O'Malley, RE ;
Thomson, D .
AMERICAN NATURALIST, 1998, 151 (03) :264-276
[2]   Resource availability dominates and alters the relationship between species diversity and ecosystem productivity in experimental plant communities [J].
Fridley, JD .
OECOLOGIA, 2002, 132 (02) :271-277
[3]   Designs for greenhouse studies of interactions between plants [J].
Gibson, DJ ;
Connolly, J ;
Hartnett, DC ;
Weidenhamer, JD .
JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 1999, 87 (01) :1-16
[4]   Plant diversity and productivity experiments in European grasslands [J].
Hector, A ;
Schmid, B ;
Beierkuhnlein, C ;
Caldeira, MC ;
Diemer, M ;
Dimitrakopoulos, PG ;
Finn, JA ;
Freitas, H ;
Giller, PS ;
Good, J ;
Harris, R ;
Högberg, P ;
Huss-Danell, K ;
Joshi, J ;
Jumpponen, A ;
Körner, C ;
Leadley, PW ;
Loreau, M ;
Minns, A ;
Mulder, CPH ;
O'Donovan, G ;
Otway, SJ ;
Pereira, JS ;
Prinz, A ;
Read, DJ ;
Scherer-Lorenzen, M ;
Schulze, ED ;
Siamantziouras, ASD ;
Spehn, EM ;
Terry, AC ;
Troumbis, AY ;
Woodward, FI ;
Yachi, S ;
Lawton, JH .
SCIENCE, 1999, 286 (5442) :1123-1127
[5]   The effect of diversity on productivity: detecting the role of species complementarity [J].
Hector, A .
OIKOS, 1998, 82 (03) :597-599
[6]   Overyielding in grassland communities: testing the sampling effect hypothesis with replicated biodiversity experiments [J].
Hector, A ;
Bazeley-White, E ;
Loreau, M ;
Otway, S ;
Schmid, B .
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2002, 5 (04) :502-511
[7]  
HERPER JL, 1977, POPULATIONJ BIOL PLA
[8]  
Hooper DU, 1998, ECOLOGY, V79, P704, DOI 10.1890/0012-9658(1998)079[0704:TROCAC]2.0.CO
[9]  
2
[10]  
Huston M A, 2000, Science, V289, P1255