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Herbivory and presence of a dominant competitor interactively affect salt marsh plant diversity
Author(s) -
Daleo Pedro,
Alberti Juan,
Bruschetti Carlos Martín,
Martinetto Paulina,
Pascual Jesús,
Iribarne Oscar
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of vegetation science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.1
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1654-1103
pISSN - 1100-9233
DOI - 10.1111/jvs.12574
Subject(s) - herbivore , salt marsh , competition (biology) , plant community , biology , ecology , marsh , habitat , herbaceous plant , ecological succession , wetland
Question Do herbivory and the presence of a dominant grass competitor interactively affect herbaceous communities and assembly rules in a SW Atlantic salt marsh? Location Upper salt marsh, Mar Chiquita coastal lagoon, Argentina. Methods We performed a field factorial experiment over 4 yr to evaluate the separate and interactive effects of (1) herbivory and (2) competition with the dominant grass species (i.e. Spartina densiflora ) on the salt marsh subordinate plant community. The factorial design includes dominant grass removal and herbivory manipulation. Results Our results show that herbivory and presence of the dominant competitor interactively affect subordinate plant cover and diversity. Results further indicate that, in the presence of the dominant competitor, patch‐to‐patch variation in subordinate species composition is lower than expected at random, a result consistent with the expected outcomes of deterministic exclusion following light competition. Removal of the dominant grass nevertheless led to patch‐to‐patch dissimilarity in subordinate species composition, far from the dissimilarity expected at random, indicating increased importance of deterministic processes that drive communities to diverge. Conclusion Our results show that the conditional effect of herbivory on plant diversity can be determined by the presence of a single plant species. Dominant plant species, in addition, may not only affect plant species diversity by determining the number and identity of subordinate species in a given patch (i.e. α‐diversity) but also by affecting spatial variability through habitat homogenization.