Affiliation:
1. Department of Botany University of Wyoming Laramie Wyoming USA
2. Department of Plant Sciences University of California Davis Davis California USA
3. The Holden Arboretum Kirtland Ohio USA
Abstract
AbstractYear of establishment can be a critical driver of plant communities with the establishment stage of community development particularly susceptible to factors including ambient rain, temperature, and other temporally variable drivers (e.g., seed and seedling predators). However, while year effects have been shown to drive community structure at local (patch) scales, it is yet unexplored how these within‐patch effects scale up to drive landscape‐level patterns of biodiversity. These dynamics are likely to be critical but are overlooked in many systems including those with high‐frequency disturbance regimes or active management. Here we leveraged a series of field‐based grassland mesocosms established identically at three sites across 5 years, and each monitored for 4–8 years. We compared the strength of these temporal and spatial drivers (year effects and site effects) on consequent patterns of spatial and temporal variability (beta diversity and turnover) between plots seeded with native perennial species versus those seeded with nonnative annual species. The composition of plots seeded with perennial species showed strong effects of planting year and consequently exhibited higher beta diversity within sites (across mesocosms established in five different years within sites), while plots seeded with annual species had higher between‐site variation but low beta diversity within sites. Plots with annual species were also more temporally variable than plots with perennial species. These findings have important implications for our understanding of key drivers of biodiversity across landscapes. Specifically, we showed that variable trajectories in community composition generated by site and year effects during establishment can promote beta diversity across landscapes dominated by perennial species, but are considerably less impactful in annual‐dominated systems. These findings further our understanding of the importance of assembly dynamics on landscape‐scale patterns of diversity, and have important management implications for restoration efforts.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Subject
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
1 articles.
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