Abstract
Seed dispersal and establishment are critical stages for plants in arid environments, where vegetation is spatially organized
in patches with suitable and unsuitable sites for establishment. Theoretical studies suggest that the ability of vegetation to
self-organize in patchy spatial patterns is a critical property for plant survival in arid environments, and is a consequence
of a scale-dependent feedback between plants and resource availability. Field observations show that plants of arid
environments evolved towards short dispersal distance (proxichory) and that the investment in reproduction increases
along an aridity gradient. Here, we investigated how plant dispersal strategies affect spatial organization and associated
scale-dependent feedback in arid ecosystems. We addressed this research question using a model where the spatiotemporal
vegetation patterns were driven by scale-dependent feedbacks between plants and soil water availability. In the
model, water availability limited vegetation growth, seed production and establishment ability. Seed dispersal was
modelled with an integrodifferential equation that mimicked important plant dispersal characteristics (i.e. fecundity,
mean dispersal distance and establishment ability). Results showed that, when the investment in fecundity was relatively
high, short seed dispersal helped maintaining higher mean biomass in the system, improving the vegetation efficiency in
water use. However, higher fecundity induced a large cost, and high mean biomass could be sustained only with high
establishment ability. Considering low establishment ability, intermediate fecundity was more efficient than low
fecundity in maintaining high plant biomass under the most arid conditions. Consistently, plant dispersal strategies that
maintained more biomass were related to a vegetation spatial organization that allowed the most efficient soil water
redistribution, through the strengthening of the scale-dependent feedback. The efficient dispersal strategies and spatial
patterns in the model are commonly observed in plants of arid environments. Thus, dispersal strategies in arid
environments might contribute to a favourable spatial organization and associated scale-dependent feedback.
| Original language | Undefined/Unknown |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 1522-1532 |
| Number of pages | 11 |
| Journal | Oikos |
| Volume | 117 |
| Issue number | 10 |
| Publication status | Published - 2008 |