Warming and changing water amount can alter the outcome of biotic interactions in native and exotic plants between facilitation and competition. Exotic plants may adapt better to changing environmental conditions, such that they may compete better than native plants. We conducted competition trials for four plant species, two exotic forbs ( and ) and two grasses (exotic and native ), commonly found in Southern interior British Columbia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTheories and models attempt to explain how and why particular plant species grow together at particular sites or why invasive exotic species dominate plant communities. As local climates change and human-use degrades and disturbs ecosystems, a better understanding of how plant communities assemble is pertinent, particularly when restoring grassland ecosystems that are frequently disturbed. One such community assembly theory is priority effects, which suggests that arrival order of species into a community alters plant-plant interactions and community assembly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContents Summary 52 I. Introduction 52 II. The Community Response to Extreme Drought (CRED) framework 55 III.
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