Empirical and theoretical evidence suggests that facilitation between plants, when it occurs, is more likely during periods of abiotic stress, while competition predominates under more moderate conditions. Therefore, one might expect the relative importance of competition vs. facilitation to vary seasonally in ecosystems characterized by pronounced dry (abiotically stressful) and wet (benign) seasons. Herbivory also varies seasonally and can affect the net outcome of plant-plant interactions, but the interactive effects of seasonality and herbivory on the competition-facilitation balance are not known. I experimentally manipulated neighboring plants and herbivory during wet and dry periods for two species of grass: Cynodon plectostachyus an...
The stress gradient hypothesis (SGH) predicts that the importance or intensity of competition and fa...
Water is a critical resource for which plants compete in many terrestrial communities. In arid commu...
The human impact on the climate system and on ecosystems has rapidly increased over the last century...
Increases in drought frequency in combination with overgrazing may result in degradation of (semi-) ...
Recent work on facilitative plant–plant interactions has emphasized the importance of neighbours’ am...
A popular hypothesis for tree and grass coexistence in savannas is that tree seedlings are limited b...
Plant interactions are suggested to shift from competition to facilitation and collapse with increas...
1. Globally, both climatic patterns and nitrogen deposition rates show directional changes over time...
Since many arid ecosystems are overstocked with domestic herbivores, biotic stress could have a stro...
1Associational resistance is a grazing avoidance mechanism resulting from herbivores being less incl...
A proposed refinement to the stress-gradient hypothesis requires consideration of the strategies of ...
Terrestrial ecosystems support a high plant diversity where different plant types coexist. However, ...
The stress gradient hypothesis (SGH) predicts that the importance or intensity of competition and fa...
Water is a critical resource for which plants compete in many terrestrial communities. In arid commu...
The human impact on the climate system and on ecosystems has rapidly increased over the last century...
Increases in drought frequency in combination with overgrazing may result in degradation of (semi-) ...
Recent work on facilitative plant–plant interactions has emphasized the importance of neighbours’ am...
A popular hypothesis for tree and grass coexistence in savannas is that tree seedlings are limited b...
Plant interactions are suggested to shift from competition to facilitation and collapse with increas...
1. Globally, both climatic patterns and nitrogen deposition rates show directional changes over time...
Since many arid ecosystems are overstocked with domestic herbivores, biotic stress could have a stro...
1Associational resistance is a grazing avoidance mechanism resulting from herbivores being less incl...
A proposed refinement to the stress-gradient hypothesis requires consideration of the strategies of ...
Terrestrial ecosystems support a high plant diversity where different plant types coexist. However, ...
The stress gradient hypothesis (SGH) predicts that the importance or intensity of competition and fa...
Water is a critical resource for which plants compete in many terrestrial communities. In arid commu...
The human impact on the climate system and on ecosystems has rapidly increased over the last century...