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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of nurse plants on the microhabitat and growth of cacti.

Augusto C. Franco, +1 more
- 01 Sep 1989 - 
- Vol. 77, Iss: 3, pp 870-886
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TLDR
Nurse plants facilitate seedling establishment by reducing high temperatures near the soil surface and provide a microhabitat with a higher soil nitrogen level, however, shading and competition for water with the nurse plants markedly reduce seedling growth.
Abstract
(1) Seedlings of the cactus Carnegiea gigantea at two sites in the Sonoran Desert were found only in sheltered microhabitats, 89% occurring under the canopy of Ambrosia deltoidea and Cercidium microphyllum. In contrast, 29% of the seedlings of Ferocactus acanthodes, which tolerates higher temperatures than C. gigantea, occurred in unsheltered microhabitats, where maximum soil surface temperatures reached 71?C. Most (70%) of the sheltered seedlings of F. acanthodes occurred under the canopy of the perennial bunchgrass Hilaria rigida. (2) Shading by nurse plants reduced the total daily photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) available for their associated seedlings. Near an equinox, a seedling of C. gigantea located at the centre of an A. deltoidea shrub received 77% less total daily PAR, which reduces its predicted net CO2 uptake by 90% compared with an unshaded seedling. Similarly, a seedling of F. acanthodes located at the centre of an H. rigida plant received 64% less total daily PAR and could fix 65% less CO2 than could an unshaded seedling. (3) H. rigida and F. acanthodes have overlapping shallow root systems (mean root depth of 0 08 m for H. rigida and 0 05 m for seedlings of F. acanthodes), which accentuates competition for water. A water uptake model, which closely predicted the soil water potential in the root zone of H. rigida, indicated that a seedling of F. acanthodes located at the centre of the bunchgrass took up 32% less water than did an exposed seedling. (4) Assuming that the effects of temperatures, PAR, and soil water on net CO2 uptake are multiplicative, the predicted net CO2 uptake of a seedling of F. acanthodes under the canopy of H. rigida was only 36% of that of an exposed seedling. However, areole production by seedlings of F. acanthodes located under the nurse plant was 68% of that measured in exposed areas. This discrepancy probably reflects the 60% higher soil nitrogen levels under H. rigida. (5) Therefore, nurse plants facilitate seedling establishment by reducing high temperatures near the soil surface and provide a microhabitat with a higher soil nitrogen level. However, shading and competition for water with the nurse plants markedly reduce seedling growth. The magnitude of the reduction depends on seedling size and location under the nurse plant.

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Citations
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Positive interactions in communities.

TL;DR: Evidence for the importance of positive interactions - facilitations - in community organization and dynamics has accrued to the point where it warrants formal inclusion into community ecology theory, as it has been in evolutionary biology.
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Competition and facilitation: a synthetic approach to interactions in plant communities

TL;DR: The roles of life stage, physiology, indirect interactions, and the physical environment on the balance of competition and facilitation in plant communities are discussed.
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Positive interactions among plants

TL;DR: The evidence for facilitation, the mechanisms by which facilitation operates, and the effects facilitation has on community structure are reviewed.
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The ecology of seeds

TL;DR: This work has shown clear trends in the dispersal and regeneration of seeds in disturbed areas, and these trends are likely to continue into the next decade.
References
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Book

Environmental Biology of Agaves and Cacti

Park S. Nobel
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce gas exchange, water exchange, temperature, and photosynthetically active radiation (PHR) relations, and water relations, with a focus on water relations.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Role of Competition in Plant Communities in Arid and Semiarid Regions

TL;DR: This paper reviews the available evidence for competition in plant communities in arid and semiarid regions and demonstrates that competition certainly occurs in these communities and involves many different species; in several instances it appears to be important in the determination of community structure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contribution of Shrubs to the Nitrogen Economy of a Desert-Wash Plant Community

TL;DR: The average nitrogen content of shrub leaves, stems, and roots was 1.31,.87, and.80%, respectively as mentioned in this paper, and areas between shrubs averaged 0.19% nitrogen.
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