Do plant communities show constant final yield?

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Do plant communities show constant final yield? / Cavalieri, Andrea; Groß, Dorothee; Dutay, Alexandra; Weiner, Jacob.

I: Ecology, Bind 103, Nr. 11, e3802, 2022.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Cavalieri, A, Groß, D, Dutay, A & Weiner, J 2022, 'Do plant communities show constant final yield?', Ecology, bind 103, nr. 11, e3802. https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3802

APA

Cavalieri, A., Groß, D., Dutay, A., & Weiner, J. (2022). Do plant communities show constant final yield? Ecology, 103(11), [e3802]. https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3802

Vancouver

Cavalieri A, Groß D, Dutay A, Weiner J. Do plant communities show constant final yield? Ecology. 2022;103(11). e3802. https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3802

Author

Cavalieri, Andrea ; Groß, Dorothee ; Dutay, Alexandra ; Weiner, Jacob. / Do plant communities show constant final yield?. I: Ecology. 2022 ; Bind 103, Nr. 11.

Bibtex

@article{09b9f856d17244c7add3e3c29e3029d1,
title = "Do plant communities show constant final yield?",
abstract = "Total biomass production of plant monocultures growing over a range of densities and harvested after a period of growth increases monotonically with density and then levels out at higher densities. This pattern is called constant final yield (CFY) and is considered one of the most general phenomena in plant ecology. If CFY applies to plant communities, it would be a key to understanding and predicting many community-level phenomena. We tested two primary hypotheses experimentally: (1) Mixtures of several species show CFY. (2) If so, the proportion of biomass production by the component species in a mixture does not change at densities above the density that reaches CFY. We performed a series of glasshouse experiments over 3 years using a “community density series,” in which the overall density of five species was varied while their proportions remained unchanged. In the first experiment, we grew a mixture of annual and perennial herbaceous species in mesocosms, and all species were also grown in monocultures at the corresponding densities. A similar experiment was performed in the second and third years, but only with annuals. A third experiment with mixtures only was performed in pots over 2 years. In all cases, aboveground biomass was harvested, separated by species, dried, and weighed. Perennials with underground storage organs produced maximum aboveground biomass at low or intermediate densities. In the second experiment, two of the species produced maximum biomass at the second-highest density in monoculture, while mixtures of all five species showed classical CFY behavior, and the contribution of the species to the mixture changed very little above the lowest density producing CFY. The results of the third experiment were also consistent with the hypotheses. In conclusion, CFY in aboveground biomass production was observed in communities of annual species, and the contribution of the individual species was relatively insensitive to an increase in density above that reaching CFY, i.e., competitive performance of the species changed with density until CFY was reached. Evidence for CFY was stronger in mixture than in monoculture. Coexistence theory must include density as well as frequency dependence if densities are below CFY.",
author = "Andrea Cavalieri and Dorothee Gro{\ss} and Alexandra Dutay and Jacob Weiner",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1002/ecy.3802",
language = "English",
volume = "103",
journal = "Ecology",
issn = "0012-9658",
publisher = "JohnWiley & Sons, Inc.",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Do plant communities show constant final yield?

AU - Cavalieri, Andrea

AU - Groß, Dorothee

AU - Dutay, Alexandra

AU - Weiner, Jacob

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Total biomass production of plant monocultures growing over a range of densities and harvested after a period of growth increases monotonically with density and then levels out at higher densities. This pattern is called constant final yield (CFY) and is considered one of the most general phenomena in plant ecology. If CFY applies to plant communities, it would be a key to understanding and predicting many community-level phenomena. We tested two primary hypotheses experimentally: (1) Mixtures of several species show CFY. (2) If so, the proportion of biomass production by the component species in a mixture does not change at densities above the density that reaches CFY. We performed a series of glasshouse experiments over 3 years using a “community density series,” in which the overall density of five species was varied while their proportions remained unchanged. In the first experiment, we grew a mixture of annual and perennial herbaceous species in mesocosms, and all species were also grown in monocultures at the corresponding densities. A similar experiment was performed in the second and third years, but only with annuals. A third experiment with mixtures only was performed in pots over 2 years. In all cases, aboveground biomass was harvested, separated by species, dried, and weighed. Perennials with underground storage organs produced maximum aboveground biomass at low or intermediate densities. In the second experiment, two of the species produced maximum biomass at the second-highest density in monoculture, while mixtures of all five species showed classical CFY behavior, and the contribution of the species to the mixture changed very little above the lowest density producing CFY. The results of the third experiment were also consistent with the hypotheses. In conclusion, CFY in aboveground biomass production was observed in communities of annual species, and the contribution of the individual species was relatively insensitive to an increase in density above that reaching CFY, i.e., competitive performance of the species changed with density until CFY was reached. Evidence for CFY was stronger in mixture than in monoculture. Coexistence theory must include density as well as frequency dependence if densities are below CFY.

AB - Total biomass production of plant monocultures growing over a range of densities and harvested after a period of growth increases monotonically with density and then levels out at higher densities. This pattern is called constant final yield (CFY) and is considered one of the most general phenomena in plant ecology. If CFY applies to plant communities, it would be a key to understanding and predicting many community-level phenomena. We tested two primary hypotheses experimentally: (1) Mixtures of several species show CFY. (2) If so, the proportion of biomass production by the component species in a mixture does not change at densities above the density that reaches CFY. We performed a series of glasshouse experiments over 3 years using a “community density series,” in which the overall density of five species was varied while their proportions remained unchanged. In the first experiment, we grew a mixture of annual and perennial herbaceous species in mesocosms, and all species were also grown in monocultures at the corresponding densities. A similar experiment was performed in the second and third years, but only with annuals. A third experiment with mixtures only was performed in pots over 2 years. In all cases, aboveground biomass was harvested, separated by species, dried, and weighed. Perennials with underground storage organs produced maximum aboveground biomass at low or intermediate densities. In the second experiment, two of the species produced maximum biomass at the second-highest density in monoculture, while mixtures of all five species showed classical CFY behavior, and the contribution of the species to the mixture changed very little above the lowest density producing CFY. The results of the third experiment were also consistent with the hypotheses. In conclusion, CFY in aboveground biomass production was observed in communities of annual species, and the contribution of the individual species was relatively insensitive to an increase in density above that reaching CFY, i.e., competitive performance of the species changed with density until CFY was reached. Evidence for CFY was stronger in mixture than in monoculture. Coexistence theory must include density as well as frequency dependence if densities are below CFY.

U2 - 10.1002/ecy.3802

DO - 10.1002/ecy.3802

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35796439

VL - 103

JO - Ecology

JF - Ecology

SN - 0012-9658

IS - 11

M1 - e3802

ER -

ID: 313706280