Sparse positive and negative weak interactions drive plant species
performance in a diverse community
- Lisa Buche,
- Lauren Shoemaker,
- Peter Vesk,
- Ignasi Bartomeus,
- Lauren Hallett,
- Christopher Weiss-Lehman,
- Margaret Mayfield,
- Oscar Godoy
Lisa Buche
The University of Melbourne School of BioSciences
Corresponding Author:buchel9844@gmail.com
Author ProfileMargaret Mayfield
The University of Melbourne School of BioSciences
Author ProfileAbstract
With many species interacting in nature, determining which describe
community dynamics is nontrivial. By applying a new Bayesian-sparse
modelling approach to an extensive field survey, we assessed the
importance of interactions from con- and hetero-specific plants,
pollinators, and insect herbivores on plant performance. We compared the
inclusion of the interaction effects as aggregate "generic" terms versus
specific terms. We found that a continuum of positive to negative
interactions, containing mostly generic but a few strong specific
interactions, was sufficient to describe variation in plant performance.
While interactions with herbivores and conspecifics varied from weakly
negative to weakly positive, heterospecific plants mainly promoted
competition and pollinators facilitated plants. The consistency of these
empirical findings over three years suggests that a broad resolution,
including the generic effects of guilds and a few specific groups rather
than all pairwise and high-order interactions, can accurately describe
species variation in plant performance across natural communities.29 Aug 2024Submitted to Ecology Letters 30 Aug 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
30 Aug 2024Submission Checks Completed
30 Aug 2024Assigned to Editor
06 Sep 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned
10 Oct 2024Editorial Decision: Revise Major