4.7 Article

Knowledge about Plant Coexistence during Vegetation Succession for Forest Management on the Loess Plateau, China

Journal

FORESTS
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f13091456

Keywords

ecological niche; overlap; plant communities; interspecific relationship; biodiversity conservation; spatial heterogeneity

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key R & D Program of China [2022YFE0115300]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41877083, 41440012, 41230852]

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The coexistence between species is crucial for vegetation restoration and ecological environment improvement on the Loess Plateau. The study reveals that species can reduce competition and promote coexistence through spatial heterogeneity and temporal asynchronous differences. The ecological niche overlap index is positively correlated with the strength of interspecific associations.
Coexistence between species within plant communities is a key issue in the practice of revegetation, forest management, and biodiversity conservation. Vegetation restoration is critical to control soil erosion and improve the ecological environment on the Loess Plateau. Here, we investigate the interspecific relationships of dominant plants during natural vegetation succession on the Loess Plateau. The results suggest that, under the ecological process of environmental filtering, species within communities can reduce interspecific competition and promote species coexistence via spatial heterogeneity and temporal asynchronous differences. The ecological niche overlap index (O-ik) significantly and positively correlated with the strength of interspecific associations. Most species pairs had weak competition and more stable interspecific relationships. The results of the chi(2) test showed that 317 species pairs were positively associated and 118 were negatively associated. The community is in a positive succession process, and the interaction relationship between species tends to be neutral. We should enhance the protection of positively associated species and pay attention to negatively associated species during forest management. Results revealed that Carex lanceolata Boott and Lespedeza bicolor Turcz coexisted easily with other species for mutual benefit, which could help build artificial forestland of native species to improve the ecological function.

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