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Plant function and evolutionary biology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Rising [CO2] changes competition relationships between native woody and alien herbaceous Cerrado species

Nayara M. J. Melo A B , Rayete S.-E. G. Rosa B , Eduardo G. Pereira B and João Paulo Souza B C
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Federal University of São Carlos, Campus São Carlos, Department of Botany, Washington Luís Highway, Km 235, CEP 13565-905 São Carlos, São Paulo, Brazil.

B Federal University of Viçosa, Campus Florestal, Institute of Biology, LMG 818, Km 06, CEP 35690-000, Florestal, Minas Gerais, Brazil.

C Corresponding author. Email: joaopaulobio@hotmail.com

Functional Plant Biology 45(8) 854-864 https://doi.org/10.1071/FP17333
Submitted: 23 November 2017  Accepted: 9 February 2018   Published: 13 March 2018

Abstract

The structure of the Cerrado may be explained by the competition between woody and herbaceous species. However, the rising CO2 concentration ([CO2]) predicted under current climatic change may modify the ecophysiological responses of woody and herbaceous species owing to functional traits of each group, which may in turn modify vegetation structure as competitive relationships change among species. In this study we examined ecophysiological responses and competition between two cerrado species under elevated [CO2]. We selected an herbaceous alien grass (Melinis minutiflora P. Beauv.) and an endemic woody cerrado species (Hymenaea stigonocarpa Mart. ex Hayne). Hymenaea stigonocarpa individuals were maintained in three plots with different M. minutiflora densities: 0, 50 and 100% in two different [CO2] (380 ppm and 700 ppm) in open-top chambers. Leaf gas exchange, effective quantum efficiency of PSII, chlorophyll content, and growth increased in H. stigonocarpa plants under high [CO2]. The competition with M. minutiflora under elevated [CO2] led to an increase in specific leaf area, leaf area ratio and biomass allocation to shoots in H. stigonocarpa. In contrast, M. minutiflora had a delayed leaf development and high stem dry mass under elevated [CO2]. These changes in growth patterns under elevated [CO2] will modify allocation of resources, improving the competition potential of the woody species over the alien grass species in the Cerrado.

Additional keywords: biomass partitioning, climate change, endemic species, morphometrical traits, tree–grass interaction.


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