Data from: Towards a predictive framework for biocrust mediation of plant performance: a meta-analysis
Understanding the importance of biotic interactions in driving the distribution and abundance of species is a central goal of plant ecology. Early vascular plants likely colonized land occupied by biocrusts — photoautotrophic, surface-dwelling soil communities comprised of cyanobacteria, bryophytes,...
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding the importance of biotic interactions in driving the
distribution and abundance of species is a central goal of plant ecology.
Early vascular plants likely colonized land occupied by biocrusts —
photoautotrophic, surface-dwelling soil communities comprised of
cyanobacteria, bryophytes, lichens, and fungi — suggesting biotic
interactions between biocrusts and plants may have been at play for some
2,000 million years. Today, biocrusts coexist with plants in dryland
ecosystems worldwide, and have been shown to both facilitate or inhibit
plant species performance depending on ecological context. Yet, the
factors that drive the direction and magnitude of these effects remain
largely unknown. We conducted a meta-analysis of plant responses to
biocrusts using a global dataset encompassing 1,004 studies from six
continents. Our meta-analysis revealed there is no simple positive or
negative effect of biocrusts on plants. Rather, plant responses differ by
biocrust composition and plant species traits and vary across plant
ontogeny. Moss-dominated biocrusts facilitated, while lichen-dominated
biocrusts inhibited overall plant performance. Plant responses also varied
among plant functional groups: C4 grasses received greater benefits from
biocrusts compared to C3 grasses, and plants without N-fixing symbionts
responded more positively to biocrusts than plants with N-fixing
symbionts. Biocrusts decreased germination but facilitated growth of
non-native plant species. Our results suggest that interspecific variation
in plant responses to biocrusts, contingent on biocrust type, plant
traits, and ontogeny can have strong impacts on plant species performance.
These findings have important implications for understanding plant
community assembly processes and ecosystem responses to global change. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.sr83ph7 |