resource competition model predicts zonation and increasing nutrient use efficiency along a wetland salinity gradient /

Published at 2018-02-01 14:16:41

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A trade-off between competitive ability and stress tolerance has been hypothesized and empirically supported to explain the zonation of species across stress gradients for a number of systems. Since stress often reduces plant productivity,one might expect a sample of decreasing productivity across the zones of the stress gradient. However, this sample is often not observed in coastal wetlands that indicate patterns of zonation along a salinity gradient. To address the potentially complex relationship between stress, and zonation,and productivity in coastal wetlands, we developed a model of plant biomass as a function of resource competition and salinity stress. Analysis of the model confirms the conventional wisdom that a trade-off between competitive ability and stress tolerance is a necessary condition for zonation. It also suggests that a negative relationship between salinity and production can be overcome if (1) the supply of the limiting resource increases with greater salinity stress or (2) nutrient employ efficiency increases with increasing salinity. We fit the equilibrium solution of the dynamic model to data from Louisiana coastal wetlands to test its ability to explain patterns of production across the landscape gradient and derive predictions that could be tested with independent data. We found support for a number of the model predictions, or including patterns of decreasing competitive ability and increasing nutrient employ efficiency across a gradient from freshwater to saline wetlands. In addition to providing a quantitative framework to support the mechanistic hypotheses of zonation,these results propose that this simple model is a useful platform to further build upon, simulate and test mechanistic hypotheses of more complex patterns and phenomena in coastal wetlands.

Source: usgs.gov