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Exclusion of root competition increases competitive abilities of subordinate plant species through root-shoot interactions

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Exclusion of root competition increases competitive abilities of subordinate plant species through root-shoot interactions. / Mariotte, P.; Buttler, A.; Johnson, D. et al.
In: Journal of Vegetation Science, Vol. 23, No. 6, 31.12.2012, p. 1148-1158.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Mariotte, P, Buttler, A, Johnson, D, Thebault, A & Vandenberghe, C 2012, 'Exclusion of root competition increases competitive abilities of subordinate plant species through root-shoot interactions', Journal of Vegetation Science, vol. 23, no. 6, pp. 1148-1158. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1654-1103.2012.01432.x

APA

Vancouver

Mariotte P, Buttler A, Johnson D, Thebault A, Vandenberghe C. Exclusion of root competition increases competitive abilities of subordinate plant species through root-shoot interactions. Journal of Vegetation Science. 2012 Dec 31;23(6):1148-1158. Epub 2012 May 30. doi: 10.1111/j.1654-1103.2012.01432.x

Author

Mariotte, P. ; Buttler, A. ; Johnson, D. et al. / Exclusion of root competition increases competitive abilities of subordinate plant species through root-shoot interactions. In: Journal of Vegetation Science. 2012 ; Vol. 23, No. 6. pp. 1148-1158.

Bibtex

@article{6ab9b013fa3a4755b226129a33c9723f,
title = "Exclusion of root competition increases competitive abilities of subordinate plant species through root-shoot interactions",
abstract = "Questions What is the importance of root competition in the competitive abilities of dominant and subordinate species?Location Pair-wise greenhouse experiment based on field data from a semi-natural grassland community in the Swiss Jura Mountains (Col du Marchairuz, Switzerland).Methods The dominance hierarchy from a mountain wood-pasture ecosystem was used to identify five dominant and three subordinate species. These species were grown in pair-wise combinations under full competition and in the absence of root competition, enabling us to calculate indices of competitive effect and response and overall asymmetry.Results Root competition exclusion led to a decrease in the competitive abilities of dominants, whereas subordinates became overall more competitive. Total asymmetry also decreased, indicating reduced competition between the two species groups. The exclusion of root competition increased both below-ground and above-ground growth of subordinates, whereas for dominants below-ground growth was unaffected and above-ground growth decreased.Conclusions We demonstrate that root competition through root–shoot competition interactions is an important factor driving the competitive dominance of species and the structure of grazed grassland communities. Locally, reduction of root competition involved in gap creation might explain persistence of subordinate species within the vegetation community and lead to an aggregated spatial pattern of subordinates involved in species co-existence in grasslands.",
keywords = "Asymmetry, Competitive effect and response, Competitive hierarchy, Plant-plant interactions, Root competition, Subordinate species",
author = "P. Mariotte and A. Buttler and D. Johnson and A. Thebault and C. Vandenberghe",
year = "2012",
month = dec,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1111/j.1654-1103.2012.01432.x",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
pages = "1148--1158",
journal = "Journal of Vegetation Science",
issn = "1100-9233",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Exclusion of root competition increases competitive abilities of subordinate plant species through root-shoot interactions

AU - Mariotte, P.

AU - Buttler, A.

AU - Johnson, D.

AU - Thebault, A.

AU - Vandenberghe, C.

PY - 2012/12/31

Y1 - 2012/12/31

N2 - Questions What is the importance of root competition in the competitive abilities of dominant and subordinate species?Location Pair-wise greenhouse experiment based on field data from a semi-natural grassland community in the Swiss Jura Mountains (Col du Marchairuz, Switzerland).Methods The dominance hierarchy from a mountain wood-pasture ecosystem was used to identify five dominant and three subordinate species. These species were grown in pair-wise combinations under full competition and in the absence of root competition, enabling us to calculate indices of competitive effect and response and overall asymmetry.Results Root competition exclusion led to a decrease in the competitive abilities of dominants, whereas subordinates became overall more competitive. Total asymmetry also decreased, indicating reduced competition between the two species groups. The exclusion of root competition increased both below-ground and above-ground growth of subordinates, whereas for dominants below-ground growth was unaffected and above-ground growth decreased.Conclusions We demonstrate that root competition through root–shoot competition interactions is an important factor driving the competitive dominance of species and the structure of grazed grassland communities. Locally, reduction of root competition involved in gap creation might explain persistence of subordinate species within the vegetation community and lead to an aggregated spatial pattern of subordinates involved in species co-existence in grasslands.

AB - Questions What is the importance of root competition in the competitive abilities of dominant and subordinate species?Location Pair-wise greenhouse experiment based on field data from a semi-natural grassland community in the Swiss Jura Mountains (Col du Marchairuz, Switzerland).Methods The dominance hierarchy from a mountain wood-pasture ecosystem was used to identify five dominant and three subordinate species. These species were grown in pair-wise combinations under full competition and in the absence of root competition, enabling us to calculate indices of competitive effect and response and overall asymmetry.Results Root competition exclusion led to a decrease in the competitive abilities of dominants, whereas subordinates became overall more competitive. Total asymmetry also decreased, indicating reduced competition between the two species groups. The exclusion of root competition increased both below-ground and above-ground growth of subordinates, whereas for dominants below-ground growth was unaffected and above-ground growth decreased.Conclusions We demonstrate that root competition through root–shoot competition interactions is an important factor driving the competitive dominance of species and the structure of grazed grassland communities. Locally, reduction of root competition involved in gap creation might explain persistence of subordinate species within the vegetation community and lead to an aggregated spatial pattern of subordinates involved in species co-existence in grasslands.

KW - Asymmetry

KW - Competitive effect and response

KW - Competitive hierarchy

KW - Plant-plant interactions

KW - Root competition

KW - Subordinate species

U2 - 10.1111/j.1654-1103.2012.01432.x

DO - 10.1111/j.1654-1103.2012.01432.x

M3 - Journal article

VL - 23

SP - 1148

EP - 1158

JO - Journal of Vegetation Science

JF - Journal of Vegetation Science

SN - 1100-9233

IS - 6

ER -