Positive plant–plant interactions expand the upper distributional limits of some vascular plant species
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Date
Authors
Raath-Kruger, Morgan J.
Mcgeoch, Melodie A.
Schob, Christian
Greve, Michelle
Le Roux, Peter Christiaan
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Abstract
Biotic interactions can shape species’ distributions through their impact on species’ realized
niches, potentially constraining or expanding the range of conditions under which species occur. We examine
whether fine-scale plant–plant interactions scale up to shape broad-scale species’ distributions, using
Azorella selago, a widespread cushion plant that facilitates other species, and the rest of the vascular flora of
sub-Antarctic Marion Island as a model system. We compared the upper elevational distributional limit of
each species when growing on vs. away from A. selago to test how the interaction with this cushion plant
species affects species’ ranges. Three out of 19 vascular plant species occurred at higher altitudes in the
presence of A. selago than in the absence of A. selago: Acaena magellanica (+26 m higher), Colobanthus kerguelensis
(+37 m higher), and Lycopodium saururus (+19 m higher). Therefore, A. selago’s fine-scale impacts
scaled up to shape the distribution of a subset of the vascular flora of Marion Island. Plant–plant interactions
thus have the potential to expand species upper distributional limits by increasing the niche space
that a species can occupy, although the influence of these interactions may be strongly species-specific.
Description
Keywords
Abiotic severity, Facilitation, Plant interactions, Range expansion, Realized niche
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Raath-Kruger, M. J., M. A. McGeoch, C. Schob, M. Greve, and P. C. le Roux. 2019. Positive plant–plant
interactions expand the upper distributional limits of some vascular plant species. Ecosphere 10(8):e02820. 10.1002/ecs2.2820.