Summary
1.Once neglected, the role of facilitative interactions in plant communities has received considerable attention in the last two decades, and is now widely recognized. It is timely to consider the progress made by research in this field. 2. We review the development of plant facilitation research, focusing on the history of the field, the relationship between plant-plant interactions and environmental severity gradients, and attempts to integrate facilitation into mainstream ecological theory. We then consider future directions for facilitation research. 3. With respect to our fundamental understanding of plant facilitation, clarification of the relationship between interactions and environmental gradients is central for further progress, and necessitates the design and implementation of experiments that move beyond the clear limitations of previous studies. 4. There is substantial scope for exploring indirect facilitative effects in plant communities, including their impacts on diversity and evolution, and future studies should connect the degree of non-transitivity in plant competitive networks to community diversity and facilitative promotion of species coexistence, and explore how the role of indirect facilitation varies with environmental severity. 5. Certain ecological modelling approaches (e.g. individual-based modelling), although thus far largely neglected, provide highly useful tools for exploring these fundamental processes. 6. Evolutionary responses might result from facilitative interactions, and consideration of facilitation might lead to re-assessment of the evolution of plant growth forms. 7. Improved understanding of facilitation processes has direct relevance for the development of tools for ecosystem restoration, and for improving our understanding of the response of plant species and communities to environmental change drivers. 8. Attempts to apply our developing ecological knowledge would benefit from explicit recognition of the potential role of facilitative plant-plant interactions in the design and interpretation of studies from the fields of restoration and global change ecology. 9. Synthesis: Plant facilitation research provides new insights into classic ecological theory and pressing environmental issues. Awareness and understanding of facilitation should be part of the basic ecological knowledge of all plant ecologists.
Summary
1.Positive interactions between species are known to play an important role in the dynamics of native plant communities, particularly in stressful habitats. However, their role in plant invasions is less known, although recent studies have started to highlight the importance of positive interactions as a driver of invasion. It has been suggested that facilitative interactions during invasions are not expected to be species-specific. 2. The perennial herb Taraxacum officinale (dandelion) is a conspicuous alien plant species invading the central Chilean Andes. In contrast to other alien species that are restricted to humandisturbed sites at high elevations, T. officinale is frequently observed growing within native plant communities dominated by cushion plants. We selected sites where two cushion species coexist ( Laretia acaulis and Azorella monantha ), and evaluated whether T. officinale is equally associated with the two cushion species or shows a preference for one of them. We assessed facilitative effects of the two cushion species on T. officinale via seedling survival experiments, measurements of photochemical efficiency of photosystem II (Fv/Fm and Φ PSII), reproductive output and recording the differences in soil temperature, humidity and nutrient contents between these cushion species and open areas. 3. Taraxacum officinale was significantly and positively associated with only one of the two cushion species ( A. monantha ). Seedling survival was higher in A. monantha than on L. acaulis or the bare ground. Photochemical efficiency and reproductive output were higher within the two cushion species than outside them. However, performance of T. officinale was significantly better within the cushions of A. monantha than those of L. acaulis . Soil temperature, humidity and contents of nitrogen and phosphorous were similar within the two cushion species; however, potassium was two times higher in the soil beneath L. acaulis than beneath A. monantha . 4. Results indicate that the native cushion species facilitates the establishment and performance of a non-native invasive species, and that this interaction is highly species-specific due to differences in soil nutrient content beneath different benefactor species. Our results indicate that native plants can have facilitative effects on invasive plants, particularly in stressful habitats such as alpine environments.
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