4.5 Article

Do interactions between plant and soil biota change with elevation? A study on Fagus sylvatica

Journal

BIOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 7, Issue 5, Pages 699-701

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2011.0236

Keywords

elevation gradient; forest regeneration; stress gradient hypothesis

Funding

  1. EU BACCARA [226299]
  2. Alcotra [032]
  3. ANR DIVERSITALP [ANR-07-BDIV-014]
  4. EU Ecochange [GOCE-CT-2007-036866]

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Theoretical models predict weakening of negative biotic interactions and strengthening of positive interactions with increasing abiotic stress. However, most empirical tests have been restricted to plant-plant interactions. No empirical study has examined theoretical predictions of interactions between plants and below-ground micro-organisms, although soil biota strongly regulates plant community composition and dynamics. We examined variability in soil biota effects on tree regeneration across an abiotic gradient. Our candidate tree species was European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.), whose regeneration is extremely responsive to soil biota activity. In a greenhouse experiment, we measured tree survival in sterilized and non-sterilized soils collected across an elevation gradient in the French Alps. Negative effects of soil biota on tree survival decreased with elevation, similar to shifts observed in plant-plant interactions. Hence, soil biota effects must be included in theoretical models of plant biotic interactions to accurately represent and predict the effects of abiotic gradient on plant communities.

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