2001
DOI: 10.2307/3100033
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The Effects of Neighbors on the Demography of a Dominant Desert Shrub (Ambrosia dumosa)

Abstract: Abstract. We used patch-specific matrix models to test the influence of neighboring plants on the demography of Ambrosia dumosa, a dominant perennial shrub of the Colorado Desert in southern California. In the desert literature, the presence or absence of neighboring plants is reported to influence plant growth and survival and has long been associated with plant-plant interactions that range from extreme competition to facilitation. Here we consider the less addressed question of how neighbor-defined populati… Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(58 citation statements)
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“…In addition, factors that affect individual fitness may not alter population growth rates. In long-lived perennial plants, increases in fecundity tend to have little effect on population growth rate (Silvertown et al 1993), but may increase the contributions of these individual plants to the population growth rate relative to other individuals (Miriti et al 2001). In these long-lived species, facilitative or competitive effects on growth rates or seedling recruitment may have larger effects on the growth rate of the population than any effects of co-flowering species on pollination.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, factors that affect individual fitness may not alter population growth rates. In long-lived perennial plants, increases in fecundity tend to have little effect on population growth rate (Silvertown et al 1993), but may increase the contributions of these individual plants to the population growth rate relative to other individuals (Miriti et al 2001). In these long-lived species, facilitative or competitive effects on growth rates or seedling recruitment may have larger effects on the growth rate of the population than any effects of co-flowering species on pollination.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dendroclimatological analysis shows that the growth of adult Spartocytisus is controlled mainly by winter precipitation (T. Kyncl unpublished data) and it likely affects seedling recruitment as well. This phenomenon is common for shrubs in dry climates (Watson et al 1997;Miriti et al 2001). While winters with precipitation below 300 mm are common in the caldera (quartiles being 266 and 555), winter precipitation could exceed 1000 mm in some years.…”
Section: Clonal Growth and Seedling Recruitmentmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Still, population dynamics of shrubs are much less known than those of two other major growth forms, herbaceous plants and trees (but see Watson et al 1997;Hoffmann 1999;Wiegand et al 2000;Miriti et al 2001;Lantz and Antos 2002). Shrubs are usually too long-lived to be studied by common demographic techniques used with herbaceous plants.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The magnitude of the contribution made by a particular vital rate depends upon both its observed variation and the effect of this variation on population growth rate. LTRE analyses have been widely used for a variety of purposes in the last few years, both in fixed designs where one or more factors are manipulated, or in random designs where demographic parameters are analysed in natural unmanipulated conditions over time or space ͑Horvitz et al 1997; Guàrdia et al 2000;Miriti et al 2001;Kiviniemi 2002͒. Fixed designs have been used in animal populations to investigate the demographic consequences of pollutant exposure ͑Levin et al 1996; Hansen et al 1999͒, food manipulation ͑Walls et al 1991Dobson and Oli 2001͒ …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%