Abstract

• Nutrient heterogeneity, root foraging and competitive interactions were investigated for six species native to south-eastern USA. • Monocultures, two- and six-species garden plots were fertilized to create spatially homogeneous or heterogeneous nutrient conditions. After 3.5months, root proliferation in rich patches (precision), mean above-ground biomass per plant (scale) and influence of nutrient treatment on total plot biomass (sensitivity) in monocultures were measured. Competition (above-ground biomass) was assessed in two- and six-species plots. • In monoculture plots, two species were relatively precise foragers, but no species showed significant sensitivity to nutrient treatment. Correlations between precision, scale and sensitivity were weak (-0.40<r<0.17), which contrasts with previous work showing a scale-precision trade-off. In two-species plots, competition was influenced by soil heterogeneity in two of six cases tested (anova, P<0.05), and precise foragers grew larger in heterogeneous than in homogeneous conditions. In six-species plots, nutrient treatment had no influence on growth or competition. • In our study system, heterogeneity effects on competition are context specific, generally weak and potentially mediated by the degree of root foraging precision.

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