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Spatial pattern in dry grassland communities of the Central Alps and its ecophysiological significance

✍ Scribed by Erschbamer, B. ;Grabherr, G. ;Reisigl, H.


Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Year
1983
Tongue
English
Weight
599 KB
Volume
54
Category
Article
ISSN
1573-5052

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✦ Synopsis


The spatial pattern of species and microhabitats in a dry grassland mosaic in a Central Alpine valley was studied by a variance/mean analysis. In addition, the water-usage strategies of the dominant species were investigated. A significant correlation between species pattern and microhabitat pattern was found for the grass species. Grasses, with their homorhizal root system, are unable to exploit sources of water in deep rock crevices, and are therefore dependent on the water-storage capacity of the particular soil layer. Dwarf shrubs and succulents (with one exception) are independent of this latter water source. The common chamaephytes exhibit contradictory types of stomatal behaviour. Artemisia aiba is characterized by a water-conservation strategy, whereas Helianthemum nummularium spp. obscurum and Teucrium chamaedrys are not. The careful usage of the water reserves by Artemisia alba would seem to represent an adaptation to dry grassland conditions. The other dwarf shrubs, in contrast, with their 'water-wasting' strategy, have a root system like that of Artemisia and are unal~le to compensate for the higher rate of water loss. Thus, the observed ecophysiological differences cannot be interpreted as being 'different solutions to the same problem', as a result of divergent evolution. Two alternative interpretations are: a) the stomatal behaviour of the chamaephytes is a characteristic of their respective genera and which is not particularly adaptive here; b) the dry grasslands studied are the remnants of a former vegetation type, which had a low level of competition.