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Dryad

Plant-plant interactions change during succession on nurse logs in a northern temperate rainforest

Cite this dataset

Woods, Carrie L; Maleta, Katy; Ortmann, Kimmy (2022). Plant-plant interactions change during succession on nurse logs in a northern temperate rainforest [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.5x69p8d34

Abstract

Plant-plant interactions change through succession from facilitative to competitive. At early stages of succession, early-colonizing plants can increase the survival and reproductive output of other plants by ameliorating disturbance and stressful conditions. At later stages of succession, plant interactions are more competitive as plants put more energy towards growth and reproduction. In northern temperate rainforests, gap dynamics result in tree falls that facilitate tree regeneration (nurse logs) and bryophyte succession. How bryophyte-tree seedling interactions vary through log succession remains unclear. We examined the relationships of tree seedlings, bryophyte community composition, bryophyte depth, and percent canopy cover in 166 0.5 m x 1.0 m plots on nurse logs and the forest floor in the Hoh rainforest in Washington, USA to test the hypothesis that bryophyte-tree seedling interactions change from facilitative to competitive as the log decays. Tree seedling density was highest on young logs with early-colonizing bryophyte species (e.g., Rhizomnium glabrescens), and lowest on decayed logs with Hylocomium splendens, a long-lived moss that reaches depths >20 cm. As a result, bryophyte depth increased with nurse log decay and was negatively associated with tree seedling density. Tree seedling density was 4.6x higher on nurse logs than on the forest floor, which was likely due to competitive exclusion by forest floor plants, such as H. splendens. Nurse logs had 17 species of bryophytes while the forest floor had six, indicating that nurse logs contribute to maintaining bryophyte diversity. Nurse logs enable both tree seedlings and smaller bryophyte species to avoid competition with forest floor plants, including the dominant bryophyte, H. splendens. H. splendens is likely a widespread driver of plant community structure given its dominance in northern temperate forests. Our findings indicate that plant-plant interactions shift with succession on nurse logs from facilitative to competitive and, thus, influence forest community structure and dynamics. --

Methods

We counted Tsuga heterophylla and Picea sitchensis seedlings in 166 randomly placed 1 m x 1 m plots on the forest floor (n = 52) and 1 m x nurse log diameter on nurse logs (defined as >30 cm diameter and at least 2 m in length; nurse log diameter ranged from 30 to 104 cm; n = 114). For a subset of the nurse log plots (n = 86) and forest floor plots (n = 12), bryophyte composition was surveyed using the point-intercept method whereby each bryophyte species found under each of 100 randomly placed dots on a transparent sheet was noted. Percent canopy cover was measured as a potential confounding factor using a densiometer placed in the center of each plot. Bryophyte depth was measured (cm) using a caliper in the center of each plot. This study was conducted over the course of three summers (2016 – 2018). This data set includes a list of tree seedling density, Tsuga heterophylla seedling density, percent canopy cover, bryophyte depth, and the percent cover of the most abundant bryophyte species in each plot.

Usage notes

Not all plots had all measurements. Bryophyte composition was only measured in 98 plots and percent canopy cover was only measured in 132 plots.