Fire occurrence and tussock size modulate facilitation by Ampelodesmos mauritanicus
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2013
abstract:
Facilitation has been reported for a wide range of plant communities, with evidence of interactions
between protégé and nurse plants shifting during their ontogenetic cycles. This study showed that large
Ampelodesmos mauritanicus tussocks can act as nurse for different species, but only after fire occurrence.
Large tussocks are typically composed by an external belt of living tillers surrounding dead standing
tillers in the inner area, thus being arranged as a "ring" shape. A low plant diversity in unburned sites,
dominated by intact Ampelodesmos tussocks, was related to the intense aboveground competition due to
space physical limitation by standing tillers, as well as to the reduction of light availability at ground
level. In contrast, after burning, tussocks resprouted only in their external belts, leaving empty inner
areas. During post-fire recovery, several species (e.g. Plantago spp., Trifolium spp., Carlina spp.) recolonize
the bare soil among different tussocks. On the other hand, a moss (Funaria hygrometrica) and several
herbaceous and woody plants (e.g. Spartium junceum, Calicotome villosa, Quercus pubescens subsp.
pubescens) were selectively distributed within the ash-full central areas of burned Ampelodesmos tussocks.
In summary, the study reported evidence of changing prevalence in the interplay of competition
and facilitation effects between small and large Ampelodesmos tussocks, respectively. These results
suggest a broad significance of the interactions between fire occurrence and ontogenetic phases of the
dominant species in affecting the restoration dynamics of natural plant communities.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Termolino, Pasquale
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