Abstract

AbstractQuestionsDo shrubs regulate herbaceous plant community by modifying seed and plant distributions at the individual shrub scale? Do the magnitude and extent of effects at this scale change with shrub cover?LocationA desert steppe, Mandalgobi, Mongolia.MethodsWe compared soil properties, seed accumulation and the establishment of plants of three functional types (annual forb, perennial forb and perennial graminoid) between shrub microsites (on mounds vs mound interspace) at sites differing in shrub coverage (high and low).ResultsShrub patches (a legume Caragana microphylla) promoted seed accumulation but inhibited plant establishment on mounds, relative to the mound interspace, for all functional types. However, the effects varied with shrub cover, particularly in the mound interspace, with responses specific to each functional type. The accumulation of soil and annual forb seeds increased with shrub cover at both microsites. Additionally, the density of annual forbs was positively related to shrub cover in the mound interspace. In contrast, the density of perennial forbs and graminoids decreased with increasing shrub cover at both microsites, possibly because of enhanced sand accumulation.ConclusionShrubs shape herbaceous plant community by causing differences at the individual shrub scale in seed and plant distributions. Additionally, we showed that individual shrub effects are shrub cover‐dependent: dense shrub stands enhanced the dominance of annual forbs in spite of the negative effect found at the individual shrub scale, whereas perennial forbs and graminoids were less abundant in denser shrub stands. Shrubs can play an important role in structuring plant communities via shrub cover‐dependent variation at microsites.

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