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首页> 外文期刊>Plant Ecology >Facilitative and competitive effects of a large species with defensive traits on a grazing-adapted, small species in a long-term deer grazing habitat
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Facilitative and competitive effects of a large species with defensive traits on a grazing-adapted, small species in a long-term deer grazing habitat

机译:具有防御性状的大物种对长期放牧的鹿的适应放牧的小物种的促进和竞争作用

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Plants can adapt to grazing environments by developing defensive traits, such as spines and toxins, or having a small phenotype, such as short and prostrate growth forms. This study examined facilitative and competitive interactions between species with different types of grazing adaptation. We predicted that large species with defensive traits sometimes protect grazing-adapted species without defensive traits from herbivores, but competitively suppress them overall. We conducted an experiment using fences and removals of an unpalatable plant in the long-term deer grazing habitat of Nara Park in Nara, Japan. We evaluated the seasonal variations in the facilitative and competitive effects of a defensive perennial, Urtica thunbergiana, on the growth, survival, reproduction, and final fitness of a small palatable annual species, Persicaria longiseta, during a growing season. The populations of the two species in the park have adapted to the grazed habitat by increasing the density of stinging hairs (Urtica) and developing inherently short shoots and small leaves (Persicaria). We found that Urtica individuals had facilitative effects on the growth of Persicaria individuals under grazing during a few periods of the growing season, but had neutral effects on survival and plant fitness throughout the season. In the fenced plots, Urtica had negative effects on the growth, survival, and reproduction of Persicaria. These results suggest that the relative importance of the facilitative and competitive effects of Urtica on Persicaria fluctuated due to seasonal variations in grazing pressure and vegetative productivity. Although well-defended plants often facilitate less-defended species, we conclude that the facilitative effects of Urtica on Persicaria are limited in a plant community with a long history of intensive grazing.
机译:植物可以通过发展防御性特征(例如棘刺和毒素)或具有小的表型(例如矮而pro壮的生长形式)来适应放牧环境。这项研究研究了不同放牧适应类型的物种之间的促进和竞争相互作用。我们预测,具有防御性状的大物种有时会保护草食性适应性物种而没有防御性的草食动物,但总体上会竞争性地抑制它们。我们在日本奈良的奈良公园的长期放牧草地中使用围栏和不宜食用的植物进行了实验。我们评估了防御性多年生植物荨麻(Urtica thunbergiana)在生长季节中对适口的小型小物种Persicaria longiseta的生长,存活,繁殖和最终适应性的季节性变化。公园中这两个物种的种群已经适应了放牧的栖息地,增加了increasing毛的密度(Urtica),并发展了固有的短枝和小叶(Persicaria)。我们发现,荨麻果个体在生长季节的几个时期对放牧的Persicaria个体的生长具有促进作用,但是在整个季节中对生存和植物适应性具有中性影响。在围栏地块中,荨麻疹对Persicaria的生长,存活和繁殖具有负面影响。这些结果表明,由于放牧压力和植物生产力的季节性变化,荨麻对Persicaria的促进和竞争作用的相对重要性有所波动。尽管防卫良好的植物通常会促进防卫较少的物种,但我们得出的结论是,在长期集约放牧的植物群落中,荨麻对Persicaria的促进作用有限。

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