Do contrasting biotic contexts in nutrient-poor grasslands affect the predictability of invasion by exploitative species following fertilization? French Alps. We examined community responses after 2 years of nutrient addition for two nutrient-poor European calcareous grasslands, a mesoxeric community dominated by the short bunchgrass Bromus erectus and a mesic community dominated by the tall rhizomatous grass Brachypodium rupestre. We also performed reciprocal transplantations of these two dominant slow-growing species and Arrhenatherum elatius, a tall fast-growing grass that dominates nutrient-rich communities and is likely to invade nutrient-poor communities after fertilization. Transplants were grown with or without neighbors, in order t...
1. A number of experimental studies have supported the hypothesis that diversity increases invasion ...
Interspecific competition and plant-soil feedbacks are powerful drivers of plant community structure...
Background - Theory predicts that plant species win competition for a shared resource by more quickl...
International audienceDo contrasting biotic contexts in nutrient-poor grasslands affect the predicta...
International audienceQuestion: Do water gradients produce patterns of responses to stress and compe...
Plant species loss due to eutrophication is a common phenomenon in temperate perennial grasslands. I...
International audienceQuestions: 1. Can the importance and the intensity of competition vary indepen...
At two field sites that differed in fertility, we investigated how species richness, functional grou...
Background and aims: We ask how productivity responses of alpine plant communities to increased nutr...
Differences in competitive ability may explain the maintenance of existing plant populations and the...
Invasive non-native plants challenge ecosystems restoration, and understanding the factors that dete...
1. Species are shifting their ranges, for example to higher elevations, in response to climate chang...
Species coexistence and local-scale species richness are limited by the availability of seeds and mi...
Interspecific competition and plant-soil feedbacks are powerful drivers of plant community structure...
The restoration of Nardus grasslands is often hampered by high bioavailability of soil phosphorus an...
1. A number of experimental studies have supported the hypothesis that diversity increases invasion ...
Interspecific competition and plant-soil feedbacks are powerful drivers of plant community structure...
Background - Theory predicts that plant species win competition for a shared resource by more quickl...
International audienceDo contrasting biotic contexts in nutrient-poor grasslands affect the predicta...
International audienceQuestion: Do water gradients produce patterns of responses to stress and compe...
Plant species loss due to eutrophication is a common phenomenon in temperate perennial grasslands. I...
International audienceQuestions: 1. Can the importance and the intensity of competition vary indepen...
At two field sites that differed in fertility, we investigated how species richness, functional grou...
Background and aims: We ask how productivity responses of alpine plant communities to increased nutr...
Differences in competitive ability may explain the maintenance of existing plant populations and the...
Invasive non-native plants challenge ecosystems restoration, and understanding the factors that dete...
1. Species are shifting their ranges, for example to higher elevations, in response to climate chang...
Species coexistence and local-scale species richness are limited by the availability of seeds and mi...
Interspecific competition and plant-soil feedbacks are powerful drivers of plant community structure...
The restoration of Nardus grasslands is often hampered by high bioavailability of soil phosphorus an...
1. A number of experimental studies have supported the hypothesis that diversity increases invasion ...
Interspecific competition and plant-soil feedbacks are powerful drivers of plant community structure...
Background - Theory predicts that plant species win competition for a shared resource by more quickl...