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Net plant interactions are highly variable and weakly dependent on climate at the global scale

Xuejun Yang, Lorena Gómez‐Aparicio, Christopher J. Lortie, Miguel Verdú, Lohengrin A. Cavieres, Zhenying Huang, Ruiru Gao, Rong Liu, Yonglan Zhao, Johannes H. C. Cornelissen

2022Ecology Letters66 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Although plant-plant interactions (i.e. competition and facilitation) have long been recognised as key drivers of plant community composition and dynamics, their global patterns and relationships with climate have remained unclear. Here, we assembled a global database of 10,502 pairs of empirical data from the literature to address the patterns of and climatic effects on the net outcome of plant interactions in natural communities. We found that plant interactions varied among plant performance indicators, interaction types and biomes, yet competition occurred more frequently than facilitation in plant communities worldwide. Unexpectedly, plant interactions showed weak latitudinal pattern and were weakly related to climate. Our study provides a global comprehensive overview of plant interactions, highlighting competition as a fundamental mechanism structuring plant communities worldwide. We suggest that further investigations should focus more on local factors (e.g. microclimate, soil and disturbance) than on macroclimate to identify key environmental determinants of interactions in plant communities.

Topics & Concepts

Plant communityEcologyBiomeFacilitationCompetition (biology)MicroclimateClimate changeBiologyEnvironmental scienceEcosystemEcological successionNeurosciencePlant and animal studiesEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesSpecies Distribution and Climate Change
Net plant interactions are highly variable and weakly dependent on climate at the global scale | Litcius