Abstract
AbstractPlant-plant interactions are integral to the establishment and persistence of diversity in plant communities. For annual plant species that depend on seeds to regenerate, seed characteristics that confer fitness advantages may mediate processes such as plant-plant interactions. Seed mass is known to vary widely and has been shown to associate with species’ differences in stress tolerance and competitive effects. However, understanding of how seed mass influences species’ responses to competition is less well understood. Using natural assemblages of six closely related annual plant species in Western Australia, we implemented a thinning study to assess how seed mass influences the outcomes of plant-plant interactions. We found relatively weak evidence for competition or facilitation among species. Our strongest results indicated that heavy-seeded species had lower survivorship than light-seeded species when interacting with heterospecifics. Seed mass was also negatively related to overall survival, counter to expectations. These findings indicate some evidence for trade-offs mediated by seed mass in this system. However, we acknowledge that other factors may have influenced our results, such as the use of natural assemblages (rather than using sowing experiments) and the presence of important small-scale environmental variation not captured with our choice of abiotic variables. Further research is required to clarify the role of seed mass in this diverse annual system, ideally including many focal species, and using sowing experiments.
Funder
Australian Research Council
The University of Queensland
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Reference54 articles.
1. Adler PB, Smull D, Beard KH, Choi RT, Furniss T, Kulmatiski A et al (2018) Competition and coexistence in plant communities: intraspecific competition is stronger than interspecific competition. Ecol Lett 21(9):1319–1329. https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.13098
2. Angert AL, Huxman TE, Chesson P, Venable DL (2009) Functional tradeoffs determine species coexistence via the storage effect. PNAS 106(28):11641–11645. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0904512106
3. Bartoń K (2020) Package ‘MuMIn’. In https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/MuMIn/index.html
4. Bates D, Maechler M, Bolker B, Walker S, Christensen RHB, Singmann H et al (2021) Package ‘lme4’. In
5. Bayer RJ, Greber DG, Bagnall NH (2002) Phylogeny of Australian Gnaphaliae (Asteraceae) based on chloroplast and nuclear sequences, th trnL intron, trnL/trnF intergenic spacer, and ETS. Syst Bot 27(4):801–814