Functional similarity and competitive symmetry control productivity in mixtures of Mediterranean perennial grasses.

Competition is a major factor structuring plant communities and controlling their productivity. The functional similarity between the interacting species and the context resource availability are assumed to be most critical factors that modulate the strength, sign, and outcome of plant competition,...

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Main Authors: Luna Morcillo, Azucena Camacho-Garzón, Juan Sebastián Calderón, Susana Bautista
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221667
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spelling doaj-7f7127cebbe64789a36a3d04ce678d762021-03-03T19:51:06ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01148e022166710.1371/journal.pone.0221667Functional similarity and competitive symmetry control productivity in mixtures of Mediterranean perennial grasses.Luna MorcilloAzucena Camacho-GarzónJuan Sebastián CalderónSusana BautistaCompetition is a major factor structuring plant communities and controlling their productivity. The functional similarity between the interacting species and the context resource availability are assumed to be most critical factors that modulate the strength, sign, and outcome of plant competition, yet their roles and interactions are subjected to debate. In a glasshouse experiment, we constructed monocultures and bi-specific cultures of three common perennial grasses of Mediterranean drylands, the short grass Brachypodium retusum and the tussock grasses Stipa tenacissima and Lygeum spartum, and investigated how the functional similarity between these species modulate their interactions and culture productivity under contrasting levels of water availability. Regardless the degree of functional similarity between the interacting species, B. retusum consistently exhibited a greater competitive ability than the other two species, followed by L. spartum, and with S. tenacissima behaving as the weakest competitor. Bi-specific cultures of B. retusum and either L. spartum or S. tenacissima produced higher biomass than the average biomass of the respective monocultures (i.e. overyielding), whereas the combination of the most similar species, L. spartum-S. tenacissima, which exhibited the highest competition symmetry (i.e., the more similar mutual impact), did not show any significant overyielding. Higher water availability increased productivity and promoted transgressive overyielding for the most dissimilar species, B. retusum and L. spartum, which however exhibited intermediate competition asymmetry. This study calls attention to the thin line between differences in functional traits and competition asymmetry that could eventually lead to either competitive exclusion or resource partitioning and coexistence.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221667
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Luna Morcillo
Azucena Camacho-Garzón
Juan Sebastián Calderón
Susana Bautista
spellingShingle Luna Morcillo
Azucena Camacho-Garzón
Juan Sebastián Calderón
Susana Bautista
Functional similarity and competitive symmetry control productivity in mixtures of Mediterranean perennial grasses.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Luna Morcillo
Azucena Camacho-Garzón
Juan Sebastián Calderón
Susana Bautista
author_sort Luna Morcillo
title Functional similarity and competitive symmetry control productivity in mixtures of Mediterranean perennial grasses.
title_short Functional similarity and competitive symmetry control productivity in mixtures of Mediterranean perennial grasses.
title_full Functional similarity and competitive symmetry control productivity in mixtures of Mediterranean perennial grasses.
title_fullStr Functional similarity and competitive symmetry control productivity in mixtures of Mediterranean perennial grasses.
title_full_unstemmed Functional similarity and competitive symmetry control productivity in mixtures of Mediterranean perennial grasses.
title_sort functional similarity and competitive symmetry control productivity in mixtures of mediterranean perennial grasses.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Competition is a major factor structuring plant communities and controlling their productivity. The functional similarity between the interacting species and the context resource availability are assumed to be most critical factors that modulate the strength, sign, and outcome of plant competition, yet their roles and interactions are subjected to debate. In a glasshouse experiment, we constructed monocultures and bi-specific cultures of three common perennial grasses of Mediterranean drylands, the short grass Brachypodium retusum and the tussock grasses Stipa tenacissima and Lygeum spartum, and investigated how the functional similarity between these species modulate their interactions and culture productivity under contrasting levels of water availability. Regardless the degree of functional similarity between the interacting species, B. retusum consistently exhibited a greater competitive ability than the other two species, followed by L. spartum, and with S. tenacissima behaving as the weakest competitor. Bi-specific cultures of B. retusum and either L. spartum or S. tenacissima produced higher biomass than the average biomass of the respective monocultures (i.e. overyielding), whereas the combination of the most similar species, L. spartum-S. tenacissima, which exhibited the highest competition symmetry (i.e., the more similar mutual impact), did not show any significant overyielding. Higher water availability increased productivity and promoted transgressive overyielding for the most dissimilar species, B. retusum and L. spartum, which however exhibited intermediate competition asymmetry. This study calls attention to the thin line between differences in functional traits and competition asymmetry that could eventually lead to either competitive exclusion or resource partitioning and coexistence.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221667
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