Abstract

Exploring how plant–plant interactions between species and their neighbors vary with biotic and abiotic factors is vital to understanding community assembly mechanisms in the context of global changes. In this study, using a dominant species (Leymus chinensis (Trin.) Tzvel.) in the semiarid Inner Mongolia steppe as the target species and ten other species as neighbors, we carried out a microcosm experiment to evaluate how drought stress, neighbor richness and season affected the relative neighbor effect (Cint) (the ability to reduce growth of target species). The factor of season interactively affected the effect of drought stress or neighbor richness on Cint. In the summer, drought stress decreased Cint directly and indirectly by decreasing SLA hierarchical distance and neighbor biomass. In the subsequent spring, drought stress increased Cint, and neighbor richness increased Cint directly and indirectly by increasing neighbor community functional dispersion (FDis) and neighbor biomass. Specifically, SLA hierarchical distance was positively associated with neighbor biomass, while height hierarchical distance was negatively associated with neighbor biomass in both seasons, which increased Cint. These findings show that the relative importance of drought stress and neighbor richness on Cint shifted over seasons, which provides strong empirical evidence of how plant–plant interactions respond to changes in biotic and abiotic factors in the semiarid Inner Mongolia steppe over a short-term time. Furthermore, this study provides novel insight into community assembly mechanisms in the context of climatic aridity and biodiversity loss in semiarid regions.

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