Patchiness and disturbance: plant community responses to porcupine diggings in the central Negev
- 1 December 1995
- Vol. 18 (4) , 410-421
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0587.1995.tb00144.x
Abstract
We tested the hypothesis that diversity and productivity of herbaceous plant communities in disturbed soil are related to the physical and biological heterogeneity of the landscape Our study was earned out on vegetation responses in porcupine diggings on a rocky slope in the central Negev desert in Israel We measured aboveground bio‐mass and plant density per species in 150 porcupine diggings (15 cm deep and 15 to 20 cm wide) and in equally sized adjacent control samples in the undisturbed soil matrix We calculated mean annual biomass production, plant density and species richness for 10 sample areas along the slope In addition, we divided the plants into groups according to propagule size and dispersal mode We denoted two types of landscape heterogeneity, which we called physical and biological patchiness Physical patchiness was measured as the ratio of bare rock to soil surface Biological patchiness was the area of the soil covered by shrubs with associated soil mound and under‐story relative to the total soil surface We also measured disturbance density, as the long term (17 yr) average density of newly made porcupine diggings We found that 1) the physical patchiness explained 30% of the variation of biological patchiness along the slope, while 2) the patterns of disturbance intensity and biological patchiness were similar (R‐=0 386) 3) Biomass, density and species richness were significantly higher in diggings than m the soil matrix 4) Plant density in the matrix, but not m the diggings, was significantly correlated with physical patchiness, 5) species richness in diggings was significantly correlated with biological patchiness, but 6) biomass production in diggings and matrix was not affected by either physical or biological patchiness of the landscape 7) Disturbance density did not affect vegetation responses in diggings and matrix 8) A shift in the plant communities in the matrix towards plants with smaller seeds was associated with increasing physical patchiness, while m diggings there was an opposite shift 9) The proportion of wind dispersers was higher in diggings than outside, while the proportion of runoff dispersers was lower, 10) the densities of runoff dispersers in diggings and matrix were positively correlated with physical and biological patchiness 11) Physical and biological patchiness formed the two major gradients of species composition, explaining 30 and 25% respectively We conclude that the network of physical and biological patchiness and soil disturbance are important in the redistribution of resources and seeds, which control plant biomass, density, species richness and diversity The bare rock surface is the main source for runoff flow with associated soil, organic matter and nutrients The understory vegetation of shrubs provides seeds for creating and maintaining diversity The soil matrix absorbs runoff flow, and disturbances absorb runoff and trap seeds Thus, differences in landscape heterogeneity and their effects on resource and seed movement interact in controlling plant community productivity and diversity in the landscapeThis publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Assembly and response rules: two goals for predictive community ecologyJournal of Vegetation Science, 1992
- Biological Feedbacks in Global DesertificationScience, 1990
- Spatiotemporal Demographic Processes in Plant Populations: An Approach and a Case StudyThe American Naturalist, 1990
- The Role of Disturbance in Natural CommunitiesAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1984
- Diversity in Tropical Rain Forests and Coral ReefsScience, 1978
- Comparison of the Distribution of Seed and Parent-Plant PopulationsThe Southwestern Naturalist, 1976
- Competitive Exclusion in Herbaceous VegetationNature, 1973
- Association Patterns Involving Desert Plants that Contain Toxic ProductsAmerican Journal of Botany, 1956
- The Association of Desert Annuals with ShrubsAmerican Journal of Botany, 1953
- The Dependence of Certain Annual Plants on Shrubs in Southern Californi DesertsBulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 1942