2005
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2745.2005.01036.x
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Interactions among tree‐line conifers: differential effects of pine on spruce and larch

Abstract: Summary1 Plant-plant interactions are increasingly considered as complex phenomena involving both negative and positive components. Within a community, the relative importance of these components is probably species-specific and may also vary among life-history stages and along environmental gradients. 2 We used the tree line of the north-eastern Calcareous Alps of Austria, composed of shrubby Pinus mugo and upright Picea abies and Larix decidua , as a simple system in which to investigate these interactions. … Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…This supports the findings of Dullinger et al (2005), that larch grows faster than spruce on average. For P. abies and P. cembra, the growth rates remained the same, as the tree-ring data did not yield higher values than the original maximum; for the latter species, the measured values were actually considerably lower, indicating that the data used may not have captured the full growth potential.…”
Section: Growth Curves and Parameter Adjustmentsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…This supports the findings of Dullinger et al (2005), that larch grows faster than spruce on average. For P. abies and P. cembra, the growth rates remained the same, as the tree-ring data did not yield higher values than the original maximum; for the latter species, the measured values were actually considerably lower, indicating that the data used may not have captured the full growth potential.…”
Section: Growth Curves and Parameter Adjustmentsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…), shrubs/trees as competitors (Dullinger et al . ), and exotics as facilitators (Yang et al . ) under certain conditions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Forest edges at tropical alpine sites often exhibit evidence of fire, but apparently still offer favourable conditions. There are reduced effects of both intraspecific competition and facilitation, topics that have been receiving increasing attention in non-tropical alpine environments (Smith et al 2003;Dullinger et al 2005) but which have hardly been studied in tropical mountains. Rundel et al (2003) have described observations on Polylepis spp.…”
Section: What Is the Present Evidence For Reproduction Limitation At mentioning
confidence: 99%