Abstract

AbstractAimPerennial plant communities are crucial for regulating ecological processes and maintaining ecosystem functions. Variation in community structure is driven by both biotic and abiotic factors, reflecting adaptation strategies of plant communities to various environments. Although much is known about the response of individual perennial plants to drier climates, empirical evidence of the community‐level responses to increasing dryness is limited.LocationEastern Australia; 1500 km gradient.TaxonPerennial plants.MethodsWe measured the abundance and size distribution (median, skewness and variance) of perennial plant communities from different growth forms (trees, shrubs and grasses), the spatial arrangement of trees in the overstorey and both biotic (competition) and abiotic (climate, soil properties) factors at 150 sites along an extensive aridity gradient from humid to arid areas. We used regression analyses and linear models to explore variation in community structure with increasing aridity and key driving factors for different perennial plant communities.ResultsVariation in community structure differed with growth form. As aridity increased, trees had wider canopies and were spatially aggregated, shrubs became miniaturised, but highly variable in size, and grasses comprised more larger individuals. Biotic and abiotic factors exerted different effects on different growth forms, with trees and shrubs consistently affected by competition and aridity, respectively, whereas grasses were weakly affected by aridity, summer rainfall and soil texture.Main conclusionsOur study highlights the idiosyncratic adaptation strategies used by trees, shrubs and grasses in response to drying climates at the community level through their effect on the size distribution or spatial aggregation. The structure of different perennial growth forms was influenced by different effects from either biotic (competition) or abiotic (climate, soil) factors. Under forecasted drier climates, canopy expansion and greater aggregation of trees might enhance resource sinks and shelter for diverse biota, potentially shielding plant communities against predicted aridification.

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