Abstract
Plant and soil resource spatial patterns were measured in pinyon-juniper communities in northern New Mexico over an elevational gradient that also served as a water-availability gradient to examine the role of resource competition and resource availability in determining plant spatial patterns. Total canopy coverage increased with increasing elevation. Percent coverage of juniper declined with elevation and, with the exception of one site, that of pinyon increased. Water appeared to be a strong factor in the maintenance of stand structure and plant distribution in this pinyon-juniper ecosystem. Plant water stress was greater during the dry season at the low-elevation, low-density sites than at the upper-elevation, higher-density sites. At the upper-elevation sites, plant distributions were significantly more clumped than at the drier sites; only at these low-elevation sites was there a significantly negative relationship between plant size and distance to nearest neighbor and a trend toward regular spacin...
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