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Global shifts towards positive species interactions with increasing environmental stress

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TLDR
A synthesis of 727 tests of the stress-gradient hypothesis in plant communities across the globe shows that plant interactions change with stress through an outright shift to facilitation (survival) or a reduction in competition (growth and reproduction).
Abstract
The study of positive species interactions is a rapidly evolving field in ecology. Despite decades of research, controversy has emerged as to whether positive and negative interactions predictably shift with increasing environmental stress as hypothesised by the stress-gradient hypothesis (SGH). Here, we provide a synthesis of 727 tests of the SGH in plant communities across the globe to examine its generality across a variety of ecological factors. Our results show that plant interactions change with stress through an outright shift to facilitation (survival) or a reduction in competition (growth and reproduction). In a limited number of cases, plant interactions do not respond to stress, but they never shift towards competition with stress. These findings are consistent across stress types, plant growth forms, life histories, origins (invasive vs. native), climates, ecosystems and methodologies, though the magnitude of the shifts towards facilitation with stress is dependent on these factors. We suggest that future studies should employ standardised definitions and protocols to test the SGH, take a multi-factorial approach that considers variables such as plant traits in addition to stress, and apply the SGH to better understand how species and communities will respond to environmental change.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The spatial and temporal dynamics of species interactions in mixed-species forests: From pattern to process

TL;DR: This review examines how spatial and temporal differences in resource availability or climatic conditions can influence these interactions between species and how these interactions influence the growth of mixtures.
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A Review of Processes Behind Diversity—Productivity Relationships in Forests

TL;DR: This review indicates that while the effects of tree-species diversity on growth and other forest functions are now receiving a lot of attention, far less is known about the effects on growth or forest functioning and direct measurements of the processes could greatly contribute to the understanding of structural diversity effects.
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Uses and misuses of meta‐analysis in plant ecology

TL;DR: The quality of published meta-analyses in plant ecology was uneven and showed little improvement over time, and adoption of a checklist of quality criteria for meta-analysis for use by research synthesists, peer reviewers and journal editors is suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Facilitation as a ubiquitous driver of biodiversity

TL;DR: It is shown that net positive effects have a long history of being considered ecologically or evolutionarily unstable, and recent evidence of its potential stability is presented, and it is presented that these increases are ubiquitous across ecosystems.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Nurse plants, tree saplings and grazing pressure : Changes in facilitation along a biotic environmental gradient

TL;DR: It is suggested that current conceptual facilitation models should at least consider the possibility of decreasing facilitation at high levels of stress, and designed a conceptual model of facilitation along a biotic environmental gradient.
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Tree effects on grass growth in savannas: competition, facilitation and the stress-gradient hypothesis

TL;DR: A meta-analysis of empirical studies to explore emergent patterns of tree–grass relationships in global savannas reveals a shift from net competitive to net facilitative effects of trees on subcanopy grass production with decreasing annual precipitation, consistent with the stress-gradient hypothesis.
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Shifts from competition to facilitation between a foundation tree and a pioneer shrub across spatial and temporal scales in a semiarid woodland.

TL;DR: The hypothesis that interactions can change from competition to facilitation as abiotic stress increases in semiarid environments is supported and may be important for the recovery of P. edulis and other foundation species that have experienced large-scale mortality during recent droughts.
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A field test of the stress-gradient hypothesis along an aridity gradient

TL;DR: Facilitation by Retama influenced composition and species richness to the point that a significant fraction of species found at the most arid end of the gradient were only able to survive beneath the nurse shrub, whereas some of these species were able to thrive in gaps at more mesic sites, highlighting the ecological relevance of facilitation by nurse species in mediterranean environments, especially in the driest sites.
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