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Journal ArticleDOI

Plant Competition and Herbivory in Relation to Vegetation Biomass

Stephen P. Bonser, +1 more
- 01 Oct 1995 - 
- Vol. 76, Iss: 7, pp 2176-2183
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TLDR
Testing theoretical predictions about the site-dependence of biotic mechanisms of plant population regulation indicates that competition and herbivory each have a greater effect on plant growth at sites with higher biomass and that Herbivory has less effect than competition on plant Growth at sitesWith relatively low biomass.
Abstract
We tested whether effects of competition and herbivory on plant growth depend on the aboveground biomass of vegetation. Our objective was to test theoretical predictions about the site-dependence of biotic mechanisms of plant population regulation. Biomass ranged from a mean of 64 to 776 g/m2 at the eight study sites, which included six old fields and two herbaceous plant communities near water. To measure effects of competition, 4-5 wk old plants of a perennial grass (Poa compressa) were transplanted into plots where neighboring plants were either left intact or removed and after 4 mo the shoot mass of transplants was compared in the two treatments. Transplants were caged in both treatments to exclude herbivores. Removing neighbors increased transplant shoot mass significantly at all sites, indicating that transplants experienced less competition for re- sources when their neighbors were removed. Regression analysis indicated that the increase in shoot mass due to neighbor removal was significantly greater at sites with higher biomass. This result supports theories that predict competition should increase with increasing bio- mass. To measure effects of herbivory, the growth of caged and uncaged plants was com- pared. Caging transplants did not increase their shoot mass significantly at the two sites with the lowest biomass. However, shoot mass was significantly greater for caged transplants than for uncaged transplants at all other sites. Caged transplants lost less tissue to herbivores such as small mammals and molluscs. Regression analysis indicated that the increase in shoot mass due to caging was significantly greater at sites with higher biomass. The com- bined effect of herbivory and competition was measured by comparing transplant growth in plots where transplants were caged and neighbors were removed with the growth of transplants in plots where transplants were not caged and neighbors were left intact. Trans- plant shoot mass was significantly greater where herbivores were excluded and neighbors were removed, especially at sites with high biomass. Our results indicate that competition and herbivory each have a greater effect on plant growth at sites with higher biomass and that herbivory has less effect than competition on plant growth at sites with relatively low biomass.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The balance between positive and negative plant interactions and its relationship to environmental gradients : a model

TL;DR: In this paper, a model that combines current ecological theory on plant competition, and its relationship to environmental severity, with evidence from a range of studies that show positive plant interactions in the field is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Indices of plant competition

TL;DR: This essay compiles and discusses more than 50 indices that have been used in studies of plant competition, and indicates that indices have to be used in conjunction with studies of the chronology, circumstances and composition of plant associations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Competition and salt-marsh plant zonation: stress tolerators may be dominant competitors

TL;DR: The results of these experiments suggest that nutrient supplies may significantly affect the competitive dynamics between salt-marsh perennials and their resultant zonation across an environmental gradient in tidal stress.
Book ChapterDOI

Impact of Herbivory on Plant Standing Crop: Comparisons Among Biomes, Between Vascular and Nonvascular Plants, and Among Freshwater Herbivore Taxa

TL;DR: Two contradictory traditions exist regarding the impact of herbivores on the ecology and evolution of plants as mentioned in this paper, and one of them is that live freshwater macrophytes are too tough for the mouthparts of aquatic herbivore, and are of low nutritional quality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Species richness and biomass: dissection of the hump-shaped relationships

TL;DR: This paper examines these relationships from the perspectives of habitat heterogeneity and environmental gradients measured within and cross five microhabitat types to find the species richness–biomass relationship to be positive, negative, or non-existent.
References
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Book

Population Biology of Plants

Journal ArticleDOI

Population Biology of Plants.

Book

Plant Strategies and Vegetation Processes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present plant strategies in the established phase and the regenerative phase in the emerging phase, respectively, and discuss the relationship between the two phases: primary strategies and secondary strategies.
Book

Plant Strategies and the Dynamics and Structure of Plant Communities.

David Tilman
TL;DR: Tilman et al. as mentioned in this paper showed that relative growth rate, which is predicted by a plant's proportional allocation to leaves, is a major determinant of the transient dynamics of competition.
Trending Questions (1)
Where is maximum bio mass available?

This result supports theories that predict competition should increase with increasing bio- mass.