Species diversity promotes facilitation under stressful conditions

Author:

Danet Alain123ORCID,Bautista Susana4,Génin Alexandre56ORCID,Beckerman Andrew P.7ORCID,Anthelme Fabien2,Kéfi Sonia18ORCID

Affiliation:

1. ISEM, CNRS, Univ. Montpellier, IRD Montpellier France

2. Laboratory AMAP, IRD, University of Montpellier, CIRAD, CNRS, INRA Montpellier France

3. School of Biosciences, University of Sheffield Sheffield UK

4. Department of Ecology and IMEM, University of Alicante Alicante Spain

5. Estación Costera de Investigaciones Marinas, Las Cruces, Departamento de Ecología, Pontificia, Universidad Católica de Chile Santiago Chile

6. Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, Utrecht University Utrecht Netherlands

7. School of Biosciences, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Sheffield, Western Bank Sheffield UK

8. Santa Fe Institute Santa Fe NM USA

Abstract

Climate change is expected to lead to a drier world, with more frequent and severe droughts, constituting a growing threat to biodiversity, especially in drylands. Positive plant−plant interactions, such as nurse plants facilitating beneficiary communities in their understorey, could mitigate such climate‐induced stress. However, testing the real‐world relevance of nurse facilitation under drought requires accounting for interactions within the diverse beneficiary communities, which may reduce, or amplify the buffering effect of a nurse. Here, we investigated when and how the interactions among nurse plants and beneficiary community members buffered drought effects in a Mediterranean semiarid abandoned cropland. We transplanted sapling beneficiary communities of either one or three species either under a nurse or in open microsites for different soil moisture levels through watering. Net facilitative effects on survival and biomass were only observed when beneficiary communities were species‐diverse and under drought (without watering), meaning that under these conditions, facilitation provided by the nurse had larger positive effects than the negative effects stemming from competition with the nurse and among beneficiary species. Nurses appear to be generating these increases in survival and biomass in drought conditions via two mechanisms commonly associated with watering in open sites: they generate complementarity among the beneficiaries and shift traits to lower stress profiles. Contrasting with watering, which was found to enhance competitive hierarchy, our study shows that nurses appear to alter species dominance, favouring the less competitive species. Our results highlight three mechanisms (complementarity, competitive dominance, and trait plasticity) by which nurse species could mitigate the loss of biodiversity and biomass production due to water stress. Maintaining and supporting nurse species is thus a potentially pivotal approach in the face of projected increase in drought conditions for many drylands across the world.Keywords: biodiversity, dryland, ecosystem functioning, facilitation, functional traits, plant–plant interactions

Publisher

Wiley

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