Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Interactions among plants and evolution
Author
Thorpe, Andrea S
Aschehoug, Erik T
Atwater, Daniel Z
Callaway, Ragan M
Publisher
Journal of Ecology
Publication Year
2011
Body

1. Interactions among plants and their consumers, pollinators and dispersers are central to evolutionary theory, but interactions among plants themselves have received much less attention. Thus focusing more attention on the evolutionary role of plant “plant interactions may provide greater insight into the processes that organize communities. 2. Here, we integrate divergent themes in the literature in an effort to provide a synthesis of empirical evidence and ideas about how plant interactions may affect evolution and how evolution may affect plant interactions. 3. First, we discuss the idea of niche partitioning evolving through competitive interactions among plants, the idea of niche construction evolving through facilitative interactions, and the connections between these ideas and more recent research on diversity and ecosystem function and trait-based community organization. 4. We then review how a history of coexistence within a region might affect competitive outcomes and explore the mechanisms by which plants exert selective forces on each other. Next, we consider recent research on invasions suggesting that plant interactions can reflect regional evolutionary trajectories. Finally, we place these lines of research into the context of extended phenotypes and the geographic mosaic of co-evolution. 5. Synthesis. Our synthesis of separate lines of inquiry is a step towards understanding the evolutionary importance of interactions among plants, and suggests that the evolutionary consequences of interactions contribute to communities that are more than assemblages of independent populations.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
99
Journal Number
3
Journal Pages
729-740
Journal Name
Journal of Ecology
Keywords
palaeobotany
co-evolution
competition
evolution
extended phenotype
facilitation
niche
plant-plant interactions
selection