Abstract
Understanding plant community responses to combinations of biotic and abiotic factors is critical for predicting ecosystem response to environmental change. However, studies of plant community regulation have seldom considered how responses to such factors vary with the different phases of the plant growth cycle. To address this deficit we studied an aquatic plant community in an ecosystem subject to gradients in mute swan (Cygnus olor) herbivory, riparian shading, water temperature and distance downstream of the river source. We quantified abundance, species richness, evenness, flowering and dominance in relation to biotic and abiotic factors during the growth-, peak-, and recession-phases of the plant growth cycle. We show that the relative importance of biotic and abiotic factors varied between plant community properties and between different phases of the plant growth cycle. Herbivory became more important during the later phases of peak abundance and recession due to an influx of swans from adjacent pasture fields. Shading by riparian vegetation also had a greater depressing effect on biomass in later seasons, probably due to increased leaf abundance reducing light intensity reaching the aquatic plants. The effect of temperature on community diversity varied between upstream and downstream sites by altering the relative competitiveness of species at these sites. These results highlight the importance of seasonal patterns in the regulation of plant community structure and function by multiple factors.
Highlights
Vascular plants are critical to the structure, functions and service provision in a wide range of ecosystems [1]
Our results demonstrate that whether factors singularly, additively or interactively regulate plant community structure and function depends strongly on the phase of the plant growth cycle
Due to the multiple roles of plants within ecosystems, quantifying the range of plant community responses to multiple biotic and abiotic factors is critical to understanding the impact of environmental change on plantdominated ecosystems [43,44]
Summary
Vascular plants are critical to the structure, functions and service provision in a wide range of ecosystems [1]. Plants typically exhibit seasonal cycles of growth and recession mediated by strong changes in growth rates [17]. Such seasonal differences in growth rate can mediate the response to biotic and abiotic factors [18]. The factors which regulate plant community structure and function may vary between different phases of the plant growth cycle, due to variance in plant growth rate, changes in the magnitude of the biotic and abiotic factors, and the strength of the responses of plants to these factors
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