Environmental Studies Department, University of California, Santa Cruz, California 95064, USA.
Ecology. 2010 Jan;91(1):141-54. doi: 10.1890/08-1446.1.
There is increasing recognition that overall interactions among plant species are often the net result of both positive and negative effects. However, the positive influence of other plants has rarely been examined using detailed demographic methods, which are useful for partitioning net effects at the population level into positive and/or negative effects on individual vital rates. This study examines the influence of microhabitats created by the native shrubs Artemisia tridentata and Purshia tridentata on the demography of the invasive annual grass Bromus tectorum in the Great Basin Desert, California, USA. Shrub understory environments differed significantly from intershrub space and were characterized by higher soil fertility and less extreme microclimates. There existed a strong spatial association between B. tectorum and the shrubs across four years, with more than double the density of B. tectorum in shrub microhabitats compared to intershrub space. Periodic matrix models were used to calculate population growth (lamda) and reproductive potential (RP, expected lifetime fecundity of seedlings) of B. tectorum in different microhabitats over two years. Modeled population growth was significantly increased in shrub microhabitats in the first of two years. This was primarily due to increased seedling establishment in Artemisia microhabitats, rather than effects during the growing season. In the following year, B. tectorum individuals in shrub microhabitats had a significantly greater reproductive potential than those in intershrub microhabitats, indicating shrub facilitation during the growing season. Loop analysis revealed an interacting effect of year and microhabitat on B. tectorum life history pathway elasticity values, demonstrating a fundamental influence of spatiotemporal factors on which life history pathways are important and/or possible. Life table response experiment (LTRE) analysis showed that increased survival and growth rates positively contributed to population growth in both years under Purshia, but only in the second year under Artemisia. This research provides evidence that the positive effects of native shrubs on B. tectorum can be strong enough to produce net positive effects at the population level, although positive effects were variable. In this study, a rigorous demographic approach was particularly useful in partitioning overall interactions into positive and negative components.
人们越来越认识到,植物种间的总体相互作用通常是正、负效应的综合结果。然而,利用详细的种群动态方法来检验其他植物的正向影响却很少见,而这种方法对于在种群水平上将净效应划分为对个体重要生命参数的正、负影响非常有用。本研究以美国加利福尼亚大盆地荒漠的一年生入侵草本植物冰草(Bromus tectorum)为对象,检验了本地灌木蒿属(Artemisia tridentata)和扁核木属(Purshia tridentata)形成的小生境对其种群动态的影响。灌木下垫面环境与灌丛间显著不同,具有更高的土壤肥力和更小的极端微气候。在四年间,B. tectorum 与灌木之间存在强烈的空间关联,灌木小生境中的 B. tectorum 密度是灌丛间的两倍多。使用定期矩阵模型,在两年内计算了不同小生境中 B. tectorum 的种群增长(λ)和生殖潜力(RP,幼苗一生的预期繁殖力)。在两年中的第一年,灌木小生境中的模型化种群增长显著增加。这主要是由于 Artemisia 小生境中幼苗的建立增加,而不是生长季节的影响。在第二年,灌木小生境中的 B. tectorum 个体的生殖潜力显著大于灌丛小生境中的个体,表明生长季节存在灌木促进作用。环分析显示了年际和小生境对冰草生活史途径弹性值的交互影响,证明了时空因素对哪些生活史途径重要和/或可能的基本影响。生命表响应实验(LTRE)分析表明,在 Purshia 中,存活率和生长率的增加对两年内的种群增长都有积极贡献,但在 Artemisia 中仅在第二年有贡献。本研究提供的证据表明,本地灌木对 B. tectorum 的正向影响足以在种群水平上产生净正效应,尽管正向影响是可变的。在本研究中,严格的种群动态方法特别有助于将总体相互作用划分为正、负成分。