Abstract

Quantifying niche space occupation based on assessments of multiple resource utilization traits can improve an understanding of plant species coexistence within communities of varying resource availability. We used an ‘occupied functional niche space (OFS)’ method based on multiple leaf traits to examine how plant communities accommodate changes in water availability within a desert-steppe ecotone spanning a limited geographic region. Our study area (western Inner Mongolia) spanned a range of conditions from highly water-limited (desert, D) to less water-limited (desert steppe, S), with two areas capturing the ecotonal boundary between these two vegetation types – partial desert (pD) and partial desert steppe (pS). We tested whether environmental filtering, heterogeneity, or limiting similarity drove trait convergence versus divergence of OFS across a desert-steppe ecotone. We quantified changes in plant community weighted means of both functional (specific leaf area and leaf dry matter content) and stoichiometric (leaf nitrogen content and leaf carbon concentration) leaf traits. OFS in the ecotonal areas (pS and pD) had larger volumes than the most mesic (S) subregion. However, divergence in the centroid of OFS was apparent for the driest (D) subregion, relative to the other three sub-regions. Underlying changes to OFS were changes in plant functional types, with more functional groups found in D and the fewest in S. For community-weighted leaf traits, SLA was highest in the ecotone area (pD and pS), while lowest in D. Further, community weighted means based on leaf dry matter content in D was the highest of all sub-regions, while both community weighted means based on leaf nitrogen content and community weighted means based on leaf dry matter content decreased as precipitation decreased, consistent with expectations. Our results suggest that communities alter both the volume and the centroid of functional trait space to adjust to decreasing water resource availability. We posit that limiting similarity (i.e. competitive exclusion) in water-resource use traits among species, supported by changes in life histories, led to OFS divergence in the ecotonal areas (pS and pD) and D, while environmental filtering may have led to convergence of OFS within the most mesic region (S) as water-stress lessons. In total, our results contribute knowledge as to how plant communities alter trait space in resource acquisition across climatic gradients, and underscores the utility of multi-trait approaches in understanding patterns of species coexistence in response to climatic changes.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call