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. 2009 Sep 3;4(9):e6887.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0006887.

Direct and indirect effects of climate change on a prairie plant community

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Direct and indirect effects of climate change on a prairie plant community

Peter B Adler et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

Background: Climate change directly affects species by altering their physical environment and indirectly affects species by altering interspecific interactions such as predation and competition. Recent studies have shown that the indirect effects of climate change may amplify or counteract the direct effects. However, little is known about the the relative strength of direct and indirect effects or their potential to impact population persistence.

Methodology/principal findings: We studied the effects of altered precipitation and interspecific interactions on the low-density tiller growth rates and biomass production of three perennial grass species in a Kansas, USA mixed prairie. We transplanted plugs of each species into local neighborhoods of heterospecific competitors and then exposed the plugs to a factorial manipulation of growing season precipitation and neighbor removal. Precipitation treatments had significant direct effects on two of the three species. Interspecific competition also had strong effects, reducing low-density tiller growth rates and aboveground biomass production for all three species. In fact, in the presence of competitors, (log) tiller growth rates were close to or below zero for all three species. However, we found no convincing evidence that per capita competitive effects changed with precipitation, as shown by a lack of significant precipitation x competition interactions.

Conclusions/significance: We found little evidence that altered precipitation will influence per capita competitive effects. However, based on species' very low growth rates in the presence of competitors in some precipitation treatments, interspecific interactions appear strong enough to affect the balance between population persistence and local extinction. Therefore, ecological forecasting models should include the effect of interspecific interactions on population growth, even if such interaction coefficients are treated as constants.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Effects of precipitation treatments on volumetric soil moisture during the 2008 growing season for each of the three precipitation treatments.
Data are from representative plots in the north block.
Figure 2
Figure 2. Mean log tiller growth rates of the transplants by species and precipitation treatment.
Bars show empirical standard errors. Table 1 contains full statistical results.
Figure 3
Figure 3. Mean aboveground biomass of the transplants by species and treatment.
Bars show empirical standard errors. Table 2 contains full statistical results.

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