Plantâsoil feedbacks promote negative frequency dependence in the coexistence of two aridland grasses
收藏DataONE2020-06-24 更新2025-07-19 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:ac3a8441122c0cb8e20f362c15633df1b05bc077408a1a71bd50e3d6bf01b7a7
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Understanding the mechanisms of species coexistence is key to predicting patterns of species diversity. Historically, the ecological paradigm has been that species coexist by partitioning resources: as a species increases in abundance, self-limitation kicks in, because species-specific resources decline. However, determining coexistence mechanisms has been a particular puzzle for sedentary organisms with high overlap in their resource requirements, such as plants. Recent evidence suggests that plant-associated microbes could generate the stabilizing self-limitation (negative frequency dependence) that is required for species coexistence. Here, we test the key assumption that plantâmicrobe feedbacks cause such self-limitation. We used competition experiments and modelling to evaluate how two common groups of soil microbes (rhizospheric microbes and biological soil crusts) influenced the self-limitation of two competing desert grass species. Negative feedbacks between the dominant plant c...
创建时间:
2025-07-03



