Aridity weakens population-level effects of multiple species interactions on Hibiscus meyeri.
Creators
- 1. Duke University
- 2. University of Colorado Boulder
- 3. Princeton University
- 4. University of Wyoming
- 5. University of Florida
Description
Predicting how species' abundances and ranges will shift in response to climate change requires a mechanistic understanding of how multiple factors interact to limit population growth. Both abiotic stress and species interactions can limit populations and potentially set range boundaries, but we have a poor understanding of when and where each is most critical. A commonly cited hypothesis, first proposed by Darwin, posits that abiotic factors (e.g., temperature, precipitation) are stronger determinants of range boundaries in apparently abiotically stressful areas ("stress" indicates abiotic factors that reduce population growth), including desert, polar, or high-elevation environments, whereas species interactions (e.g., herbivory, competition) play a stronger role in apparently less stressful environments. We tested a core tenet of this hypothesis-that population growth rate is more strongly affected by species interactions in less stressful areas-using experimental manipulations of species interactions affecting a common herbaceous plant, Hibiscus meyeri (Malvaceae), across an aridity gradient in a semiarid African savanna. Population growth was more strongly affected by four distinct species interactions (competition with herbaceous and shrubby neighbors, herbivory, and pollination) in less stressful mesic areas than in more stressful arid sites. However, contrary to common assumptions, this effect did not arise because of greater density or diversity of interacting species in less stressful areas, but rather because aridity reduced sensitivity of population growth to these interactions. Our work supports classic predictions about the relative strength of factors regulating population growth across stress gradients, but suggests that this pattern results from a previously unappreciated mechanism that may apply to many species worldwide.
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Publication Details
Journal article
Journal:
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
ISSN:
10916490
Volume:
115
Pages:
543-548
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Funding
Financial Support
Philanthropic Educational Organization Scholar Award — Grant: NA
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L'OREAL-UNESCO Award for Women in Science — Grant: NA
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National Science Foundation — Grant: DEB 1311394
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Wyoming NASA Space Grant — Grant: NA
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CU | University of Colorado Boulder — Grant: NA
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University of Wyoming — Grant: NA
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National Science Foundation — Grant: DEB 1355122
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National Science Foundation — Grant: DEB 1457691
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National Science Foundation — Grant: DEB EAGER 1547679
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National Science Foundation — Grant: NSF DEB 1556728
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University of Wyoming — Grant: NA
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University of Wyoming Biodiversity Institute — Grant: NA
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National Science Foundation — Grant: DEB 1149980
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National Science Foundation — Grant: DEB 1242355
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National Science Foundation — Grant: DEB 1352781
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Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program — Grant: 15 RC01-096
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Gouvernement du Canada | Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada — Grant: NA
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References
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ME Afkhami, PJ McIntyre, SY Strauss, Mutualist-mediated effects on species\u2019...
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