Multiple effects of shrubs on annual plant communities in arid lands of South Australia

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2002

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Facelli, J.
Schapel, A.

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Austral Ecology, 2002; 27(4):422-432

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<jats:p><jats:bold>Abstract </jats:bold> The presence of shrubs in arid lands creates spatial heterogeneity that affects the distribution and performance of annual plants; several possible mechanisms have been implicated. A preliminary survey in a chenopod shrubland in South Australia showed differences in the distribution of annual plants under canopies of <jats:italic>Atriplex vesicaria</jats:italic> and <jats:italic>Maireana sedifolia</jats:italic> (the two dominant shrub species) and open spaces. A series of experiments were conducted to test the potential contribution to these patterns of nutrient enrichment under shrubs, differential seed accumulation, stress reduction by the canopy, competition by shrub roots, and protection against grazing. The germinable soil seed‐bank under <jats:italic>A. vesicaria</jats:italic> and <jats:italic>M. sedifolia</jats:italic> was different from that in open spaces, but these differences can only explain a fraction of the differences observed in the growing annual plant community in different microsites. The soil under <jats:italic>A. vesicaria</jats:italic> had higher total nitrogen content than soil in open spaces, whereas soil under <jats:italic>M. sedifolia</jats:italic> had lower available phosphorus than open spaces. Although annual plant densities under <jats:italic>A. vesicaria</jats:italic> were higher than in open spaces, experimental removal of shrubs increased their density, suggesting that shrub canopies inhibit annual plants in this system. Surprisingly, trenching of open areas close to shrubs (severing lateral shrub roots) decreased annual plant density. We suggest that water moves laterally through shrub roots, in a process akin to a hydraulic lift, increasing water availability for the annual plants. Exclusion of vertebrate grazers had a stronger effect on annual plant biomass in open spaces than under <jats:italic>M. sedifolia</jats:italic>, suggesting that this shrub provides shelter against herbivory. Overall our results show that shrubs can have simultaneously facilitative and inhibitory effects on the annual plant community through different mechanisms, but more importantly that different shrub species have different effects. This is a potential mechanism allowing for species coexistence of annual plants.</jats:p>

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