scholarly journals Context dependency of biotic interactions and its relation to plant rarity

2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (6) ◽  
pp. 758-768 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Kempel ◽  
Hugo Vincent ◽  
Daniel Prati ◽  
Markus Fischer
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Kempel ◽  
Hugo Vincent ◽  
Daniel Prati ◽  
Markus Fischer

AbstractAimBiotic interactions can determine rarity and commonness of species, however evidence that rare and common species respond differently to biotic stress is scarce. This is because biotic interactions are notoriously context-dependent and traits leading to success in one habitat might be costly or unimportant in another. We aim to identify plant characteristics that are related to biotic interactions and may drive patterns of rarity and commonness, taking environmental context into account.LocationSwitzerlandMethodsIn a multi-species experiment, we compared the response to biotic interactions of 19 rare and 21 widespread congeneric plant species in Switzerland, while also accounting for variation in environmental conditions of the species’ origin.ResultsOur results restrict the long-standing hypothesis that widespread species are superior competitors to rare species to only those species originating from resource rich habitats, in which competition is usually strong. Tolerance to herbivory and ambient herbivore damage on the other hand, did not differ between widespread and rare species. In accordance to the resource-availability hypothesis, widespread species from resource rich habitats where more damaged by herbivores (less defended) than widespread species from resource poor habitats – such a growth-defense tradeoff was lacking in rare species. This indicates that the evolutionary important tradeoff between traits increasing competitive-ability and defence is present in widespread species but may have been lost in rare species.Main conclusionsOur results indicate that biotic interactions, above all competition, might indeed set range limits, and underlines the importance of including context-dependency in studies comparing traits of common and rare or invasive and non-invasive species.


Author(s):  
Anne Kempel ◽  
Harald Auge ◽  
Eric Allan

Global environmental change is strongly altering biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Antagonistic biotic interactions affect the diversity and functioning of plant communities but are notoriously context dependent and are therefore likely to be altered by global change drivers. Global change can directly affect biotic interactions and can also indirectly alter the abundance, diversity and composition of plant enemy communities, via changes to plant productivity, diversity and functional composition. Changes in the enemy community feedback to alter the plant community. However, we lack predictions for how different global change drivers may alter enemy communities and their impact on plant communities. In this review we summarize current knowledge on the impact of invertebrate herbivores and fungal pathogens on plant productivity, diversity and community composition, and outline theory and expectations on how important global change drivers – nitrogen enrichment, warming and elevated CO2, as well as the loss of plant and insect diversity, may affect the impact of plant-enemies on plant communities.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gretchen R. O'Neil ◽  
◽  
James D. Schiffbauer ◽  
James D. Schiffbauer ◽  
John Warren Huntley ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pate E. Richardson ◽  
◽  
Daniele Scarponi ◽  
Tommaso Scirocco ◽  
John Warren Huntley

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