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Subtle differences in environmental stress along a flooding gradient affect the importance of inter-specific competition in an annual plant community
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Ulrich?BroseEmail author  Katja?Tielb?rger
Institution:(1) Centre for Agricultural Landscape and Land-Use Research, Institute of Land-Use Systems and Landscape Ecology, 15374 Muencheberg, Germany;(2) Institute of Biochemistry and Biology, University of Potsdam, Maulbeerallee 2, 14469 Potsdam, Germany;(3) Present address: Department of Biology, Technical University of Darmstadt, Schnittspahnstr. 3, 64293 Darmstadt, Germany
Abstract:Empirical evidence suggests that the direction and intensity of plant–plant interactions may depend on the favourability of the environment. Previous studies have mainly focused on steep gradients of environmental stress or disturbance, while the interplay of competition and environment has not been tested for subtle environmental differences. Here, we present results from a study on plant communities of temporary wetlands in East-German farmland. Due to yearly ploughing in autumn, the vegetation is composed of annual species. Flooding does not affect adult plants and the elevation on the gradient expresses differences in the length of the growing season rather than in disturbance intensity or severe environmental stress. We tested whether such subtle differences in environmental stress may affect the importance of interspecific competition by the dominant species. Two treatments were applied at two elevations: removal of the dominant species (Matricaria maritima ssp. inodora) and reciprocal transplants of the seed-bank of the two elevations. At both elevations, removal of Matricaria inodora led to an increase in total species richness and number of wetland species, but the effects were substantially stronger at high elevations. Removal and the elevation on the flooding gradient significantly influenced the plant community composition. In particular, the weed communities became more similar to the wetland communities after the removal. Transplanted weed species did not emerge at low elevations. While two of four target species had significantly higher densities after the removal at high elevations, none of them was influenced by removal at low elevations. This indicates that, consistent with previous studies from other habitat types, competition by the dominant species was more intense under conditions of low environmental stress. The overall results suggest that both flooding as well as interspecific competition are important in structuring the plant communities along the freshwater gradient studied.
Keywords:Agroecosystems  Biodiversity  Disturbance  Ephemeral wetlands  Removal experiment  Stress
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