4.5 Article

Positive associations between the cushion plant Arenaria polytrichoides (Caryophyllaceae) and other alpine plant species increase with altitude in the Sino-Himalayas

Journal

JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE
Volume 21, Issue 6, Pages 1048-1057

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1654-1103.2010.01215.x

Keywords

Alpine environment; Arenaria polytrichoides; Facilitation; Nurse effect; Sino-Himalayas

Funding

  1. Yunnan Natural Science Foundation [2008CC013]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of China [30625004, 40930209, 30900084]
  3. Chinese Academy of Sciences [KSCX2-YW-Z-1019]
  4. Western Light Talent Culture Project
  5. BBVA Foundation
  6. CONICYT [P05-002 F ICM, PFB-023]

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Question Does the facilitative effect of cushion plants increase with elevation as a result of increases in environmental harshness? Does this hypothesis apply in the Sino-Himalayan Mountains? Location Lakaka Pass on the Baima Snow Mountains (28 degrees 20'N, 99 degrees 05'E), SW China. Methods We evaluated the spatial association of several plant species with the cushion plant Arenaria polytrichoides (Caryophyllaceae) at two elevations (4500 m and 4700 m) in the study site and monitored temperature, moisture and nutritional status of soil beneath and outside the cushions. Results While 14 species grow more frequently associated with the cushions at the higher elevation, at the lower site only three species were positively associated with cushions. Eleven of the species that occurred at both elevations changed their spatial association from neutral or negative with cushions at the lower site to positive at the higher elevation site. Substrate temperatures were rather similar between the cushions and areas of bare ground. Cushions maintained higher moisture than areas of bare ground at both elevations. Soils beneath cushions contained significantly more available nitrogen and potassium compared to open areas at the higher elevation. Conclusions Our results show that facilitation by A. polytrichoides cushions increases with elevation in the Sino-Himalayan region. This facilitation effect of A. polytrichoides cushions is probably due to the improved nutrient availability provided by cushion plants in the higher elevation, and these conditions probably permit increased plant recruitment, growth and survival.

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