Intransitivity in plant–soil feedbacks is rare but is associated with multispecies coexistence

Author:

Pajares‐Murgó Mariona12ORCID,Garrido José L.34ORCID,Perea Antonio J.12ORCID,López‐García Álvaro123ORCID,Bastida Jesús M.3,Prieto‐Rubio Jorge3ORCID,Lendínez Sandra3,Azcón‐Aguilar Concepción3,Alcántara Julio M.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biología Animal, Biología Vegetal y Ecología Universidad de Jaén Jaen Spain

2. Institute Interuniversitario de Investigación del Sistema Tierra en Andalucía (IISTA) Granada Spain

3. Department of Microbiología del Suelo y la Planta Estación Experimental del Zaidín (EEZ), CSIC Granada Spain

4. Department of Ecología Evolutiva Estación Biológica de Doñana (EBD), CSIC Sevilla Spain

Abstract

AbstractAlthough plant–soil feedback (PSF) is being recognized as an important driver of plant recruitment, our understanding of its role in species coexistence in natural communities remains limited by the scarcity of experimental studies on multispecies assemblages. Here, we experimentally estimated PSFs affecting seedling recruitment in 10 co‐occurring Mediterranean woody species. We estimated weak but significant species‐specific feedback. Pairwise PSFs impose similarly strong fitness differences and stabilizing‐destabilizing forces, most often impeding species coexistence. Moreover, a model of community dynamics driven exclusively by PSFs suggests that few species would coexist stably, the largest assemblage with no more than six species. Thus, PSFs alone do not suffice to explain coexistence in the studied community. A topological analysis of all subcommunities in the interaction network shows that full intransitivity (with all species involved in an intransitive loop) would be rare but it would lead to species coexistence through either stable or cyclic dynamics.

Funder

Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades

Secretaría de Estado de Investigación, Desarrollo e Innovación

Publisher

Wiley

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