Grupo de Conservación de la biodiversidad, Departamento de Biodiversidad y Restauración, Instituto Pirenaico de Ecología, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Zaragoza, Spain.
PLoS One. 2012;7(7):e40551. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0040551. Epub 2012 Jul 9.
In semi-arid ecosystems, vegetation is heterogeneously distributed, with plant species often associating in patches. These associations between species are not constant, but depend on the particular response of each species to environmental factors. Here, we investigated how plant species associations change in response to livestock grazing in a semi-arid ecosystem, Cabo de Gata-Níjar Natural Park in South East Spain. We established linear point-intercept transects at four sites with different grazing intensity, and recorded all species at each point. We investigated plant associations by comparing the number of times that each pair of species occurred at the same spatial point (co-occurrences), with the expected number of times based on species abundances. We also assessed associations for each shrub and grass species by considering all their pairs of associations and for the whole plant community by considering all pairs of associations on each site. At all sites, the plant community had a negative pattern of association, with fewer co-occurrences than expected. Negative association in the plant community increased at maximum grazing intensity. Most species associated as expected, particularly grass species, and positive associations were most important at intermediate grazing intensities. No species changed its type of association along the grazing gradient. We conclude that in the present plant community, grazing-resistant species compete among themselves and segregate in space. Some shrub species act as refuges for grazing-sensitive species that benefit from being spatially associated with shrub species, particularly at intermediate grazing intensities where positive associations were highest. At high grazing intensity, these shrubs can no longer persist and positive associations decrease due to the disappearance of refuges. Spatial associations between plant species and their response to grazing help identify the factors that organize plant communities, and may contribute to improving management of semi-arid ecosystems.
在半干旱生态系统中,植被呈异质分布,植物物种经常以斑块的形式聚集在一起。这些物种之间的联系不是固定不变的,而是取决于每个物种对环境因素的特殊反应。在这里,我们研究了在半干旱生态系统,即西班牙东南部的卡波德加塔-尼哈尔自然公园,植物物种的联系如何因牲畜放牧而发生变化。我们在四个不同放牧强度的地点建立了线性点截线样带,并在每个点记录所有物种。我们通过比较每个物种在同一空间点(共同出现)出现的次数与根据物种丰度预测的预期次数来研究植物的联系。我们还通过考虑每个灌木和草本物种的所有关联对来评估每个灌木和草本物种的关联,通过考虑每个地点的所有关联对来评估整个植物群落的关联。在所有地点,植物群落的关联呈负模式,共同出现的次数少于预期。在最大放牧强度下,植物群落的负关联增加。大多数物种的关联符合预期,特别是草本物种,而在中等放牧强度下,正关联最为重要。没有物种沿着放牧梯度改变其关联类型。我们得出结论,在目前的植物群落中,抗放牧物种相互竞争并在空间上隔离。一些灌木物种为对放牧敏感的物种提供庇护,与灌木物种空间相关的物种受益于此,特别是在中等放牧强度下,正关联最高。在高放牧强度下,这些灌木无法再持续存在,正关联因庇护所的消失而减少。植物物种之间的空间联系及其对放牧的反应有助于确定组织植物群落的因素,并可能有助于改善对半干旱生态系统的管理。