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Plant Ecology - Chapter 10 Competition
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Reduction in fitness due to shared use of a resource that is in limited supply Intraspecific Interspecific
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Competition - / - both parties lose 0 / - or + / - asymmetric competition - largest individuals have disproportionate negative effects on their smaller neighbors
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Competition Small head start may confer a large size advantage - competitive dominance over later- emerging plants Self-thinning - higher early mortality in smaller or weaker individuals in overly dense plantings
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Competition Competing for light, water and mineral nutrients from the soil, space to grow and acquire resources, access to mates Competitive interactions experienced by a plant occur very locally
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Competition Immediate density most important - average density essentially irrelevant Effects of neighbors decrease sharply with distance
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Competition Winning the competition for light may affect all other competition
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Competition Tall plants may intercept light, but small plants may intercept water, soil nutrients Asymmetric, but larger plants usually have much greater effects
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Competition Trade-offs and strategies Winning competition for one resource may compromise ability to win comp. for another (light vs. nutrients) Outcome may change as resource availability changes
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Allelopathy - Allelochemicals Chemical warfare among neighboring plants Release toxins into soil to reduce growth or kill adjacent plants Sure way to gain competitive advantage Knapweed on rangelands - little effect on Eurasian plants, strong effects on N. Amer. plants
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Facilitation Positive effects on neighbors rather than negative (opposite of competition?) May be particularly common under conditions of high abiotic stress, or high herbivory
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Facilitation-nurse plants Mature “nurse” plant may facilitate germination, establishment, growth of juvenile plant of a different growth form Particularly common in deserts, e.g. columnar cactus established with help of nurse shrub
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Facilitation-CMNs Common mycorrhizal networks - extensive connections linking many plants of differing age, species May facilitate seedling and sapling survival and growth by way of nutrient and water transfers among plants Mature helping juvenile
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Competition Models Lotka-Volterra model not very useful for plants, since plants don’t experience the average effects of density the same way animals do Two different groups of models developed for plants
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Competition Models Equilibrium models - how different the niches of species need to be to prevent competitive exclusion at equilibrium
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Competition Models Nonequilibrium models - emphasize importance of resource variation (in time, space) and competition affecting coexistence
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Competition Debate Are there predictable competitive hierarchies across different communities?
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Competition Debate Is competition more intense in high- productivity than low-productivity environments?
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Competition Debate How important is competition compared to other forces in determining species distributions and community composition?
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Competition Debate No general consensus on any of these yet
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