Water Availability Influences Species Distributions on Serpentine Soils

2018 
Abstract Serpentine soils are highly variable environments, but how this variability contributes to maintaining distinct distributions of species at small scales is unclear. We studied parapatric populations of Layia jonesii A. Gray, a rare serpentine endemic, and L. platyglossa (Fisch. & C. A. Mey) A. Gray, a wide-spread species, to understand how edaphic variability and competitive interactions maintain co-occurring, somewhat interfertile, relatives within serpentine environments. We analyzed soil characteristics along a serpentine hillside where L. jonesii and L. platyglossa are restricted to the top and bottom of the hillside, respectively. We used reciprocal transplants to investigate fitness differences on the hillside and a competition experiment to determine if species interactions also restrict the distribution of L. jonesii. The soil analyses showed the top of the hill is drier than the bottom, yet both locations are chemically indistinguishable. Layia platyglossa is better adapted to the edaphi...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    50
    References
    4
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []