Introduction
An innate feature of dryland ecosystems globally is the partitioning of the landscape into two discrete patch types. One patch type (run-on zone, fertile patch and fertile island) accumulates resources such as water, nutrients, seeds and organic matter, while the other (runoff zone and interspace) supplies resources to these accumulation zones. Fertile islands are a form of geomorphic patterning that is driven by the movement of water and wind (Aguiar and Sala, Reference Aguiar and Sala1999). Water-driven morphologies tend to be linear shaped, such as in Brousse tigrée woodlands in Africa (Thiery et al., Reference Thiery, d’Herbes and Valentin1995) and banded mulga groves in Australia (Tongway and Ludwig, Reference Tongway and Ludwig1994). Where resources arrive from multiple directions, generally through the action of wind, fertile islands tend to assume a spotted, isodiametric shape and are often associated with long-lived woody plants (Schlesinger et al., Reference Schlesinger, Reynolds, Cunningham, Huenneke, Jarrell, Virginia and Whitford1990). Fertile patches or islands typically form around large individual perennial plants or patches of plants, creating geomorphic hotspots of enhanced productivity, diversity and function (Eldridge et al., Reference Eldridge, Ding and Dorrough2024). Perennial woody plants are foundation species in drylands and play pivotal roles in the functioning of ecosystems (Maestre et al., Reference Maestre, Eldridge, Soliveres, Kefi, Delgado-Baquerizo, Bowker, García-Palacios, Guitan, Gallardo, Lazaro and Berdugo2016; Rey et al., Reference Rey, Cancio, Manzaneda, González-Robles, Valera, Salido and Alcántara2018). Woody plants act as critical habitat for biota, provide important drought reserve for livestock and native herbivores, protect the soil against wind and water erosion and contribute to the creation of patchiness in the landscape, which can lead to the formation of fertile islands (Garner and Steinberger, Reference Garner and Steinberger1989; Lozano-Parra et al., Reference Lozano-Parra, Pulido, Lozano-Fondón and Schnabel2018).
We have a relatively good understanding of islands created by woody plants and how they influence biotic and abiotic processes (Schlesinger et al., Reference Schlesinger, Reynolds, Cunningham, Huenneke, Jarrell, Virginia and Whitford1990; Ward et al., Reference Ward, Trinogga, Wiegand, du Toit, Okubamichael, Reinsch and Schleicher2018; Ding and Eldridge, Reference Ding and Eldridge2024), but studies have often conflated differences in species and their morphologies with different geomorphic positions, which typically represent different productivity levels. These two factors would be expected to influence the extent of resource capture and retention by plants and therefore island strength. Larger plants have been shown to produce stronger island effects (Eldridge et al., Reference Eldridge, Bowker, Maestre, Roger, Reynolds and Whitford2011, Reference Eldridge, Ding and Dorrough2024; Ward et al., Reference Ward, Trinogga, Wiegand, du Toit, Okubamichael, Reinsch and Schleicher2018), but it is unclear whether this holds true within a particular species, among a group of closely related species, or across differences in ecosystem productivity. For example, global analyses have demonstrated increases in soil fertility and surface stability with increasing shrub size across a wide range of sizes from 0.2 m (Nassauvia glomerulosa) to more than 13 m (Colutea buhsei) in height (Eldridge et al., Reference Eldridge, Ding and Dorrough2024). Differences in function could be driven by height and species-level morphological effects, and their interaction, but it is unknown whether size effects still hold within similar-sized island species. Despite the many studies of woody plants and their relationships with fertile islands (Eldridge et al., Reference Eldridge, Ding and Dorrough2024), we know of no studies that have specifically examined how the fertile effect might vary in relation to productivity. Under conditions of low productivity, we might expect a stronger relative fertile island effect simply due to the larger difference between conditions beneath the focal island plants and those in the corresponding non-island interspaces. Conversely, under high levels of productivity, with deeper more fertile soils and greater plant cover in the interspaces, we might expect a lower fertile island effect for the opposite reason. Sites with intermediate levels of productivity would then be expected to exhibit levels of the fertile island effect somewhere between sites in high and low productivity. An examination of how productivity might influence the extent to which plants augment their understorey and below-ground effects is important because it can shed light on the effectiveness of restoration programmes that attempt to reinstate perennial nurse plants as drivers of ecosystem structure and function in areas of different productivity.
We used three con-specific, similar-sized woody shrubs to test the relative effects of species size (volume), and ecosystem productivity (using NDVI as a proxy of productivity), on the relative ability of these plants to function as fertile islands. The three species (Maireana pyramidata, Maireana astrotricha and Maireana aphylla) are all members of the family Chenopodiaceae, a genus that is widely distributed in drylands (Kadereit et al., Reference Kadereit, Gotzek, Jacobs and Freitag2005). By selecting shrubs from the same genus, we are able to remove potential effects associated with a comparison of multiple genera on the ability of plants to supplement surface soils. Our productivity gradient was driven by differences in landform, soils and runoff–run-on relationships. Previous studies have shown that these shrubs have enhanced hydrological function (Dunkerley, Reference Dunkerley2002), trap sediment beneath their canopies (Emmerson and Facelli, Reference Emmerson and Facelli1996) and act as important nurse plants for a range of understorey protégé species (Weedon and Facelli, Reference Weedon and Facelli2008). The link between size and the ability to intercept wind, and therefore geomorphically mobilised sediments, is well established (Field et al., Reference Field, Breshears, Whicker and Zou2012).
Here we examine two predictions of the fertile island effect using an arid shrubland as our model system. First, we predicted that larger shrubs would support a stronger fertile island effect, irrespective of species, and second, that the relative fertile island effect would be more pronounced in areas of low productivity (ranges) than high productivity (plains). Notwithstanding the level of productivity, the fertile island effect would be expected to increase with increasing plant size, largely because shrubs facilitate understorey protégé species and provide habitat for plant resident arthropods that exude detritus and organic material in the area at the base of the shrub. Our study contributes ecological understanding of how islands are formed beneath shrubs and how this translates into differences in soil function, soil stability and understorey plant conditions. It also has practical implications for the restoration of degraded drylands where plant species and size may be a consideration.
Methods
The study area
The research was conducted at Fowlers Gap Arid Zone Research Station in northwest New South Wales, Australia (−31.30o, 141.71o), an area classified as arid (Aridity Index = 0.21). The mean annual precipitation is approximately 242 mm, with most rainfall occurring in the summer (BOM, 2023). The region’s average temperatures range from 11.5 °C in winter to 27.3 °C in summer. The variability in weather patterns is influenced by the El Niño-Southern Oscillation, significantly affecting rainfall distribution, particularly in arid areas of eastern Australia (Nicholls, Reference Nicholls1991).
The productivity gradient was represented by differences in geomorphology from ranges and hills, through footslopes to plains (Figure 1a). The ranges are characterised by steep slopes (> 20%) with shallow sandy loam soils. The plains occur in the lower elevation areas (<1% slope) that are subject to periodic flooding and characterised by relatively level areas with a mixture of clay soils and red duplex clay loams (Eldridge, Reference Eldridge1988). Plains are intermittently flooded and receive runoff water from the surrounding hills and ranges. They are characterised by deep, clay-rich soils. Footslopes represent positions of intermediate productivity, with slopes from 5 to 10% and the soils characterised by stony-covered gibber landscapes of variable depth (Table S1). These three landscape positions represent a gradient in net primary productivity (NPP; linear model: F 2,147 = 241.0, P < 0.0001; Figure 1b) with a strong increase from ranges (low) to plains (high), though differences in NPP between low and intermediate productivity were not significantly different. The lack of a significant difference between low and intermediate productivity is likely due to the diffuse boundary between the two landforms (Eldridge, Reference Eldridge1988). The selected species were chosen because they are widespread and representative of this region (Cunningham et al., Reference Cunningham, Mulham, Milthorpe and Leigh1992). M. pyramidata is found across the productivity gradient, Maireana astrotricha in areas of low and intermediate productivity and M. aphylla confined to areas of high productivity. These species have relatively similar shapes and sizes, and all have been described as being hemispherical perennial plants to about 1.5 m high (https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au.). The three species vary in their morphology and leaf traits. For example, M. pyramidata has prominent dense fleshly leaves and can grow into a large sprawling shrub up to 1.5 m tall. Though closely related, Maireana astrotricha is a lower-growing shrub with dense and smaller leaves, while M. aphylla is largely leafless, with a twig-like appearance (Cunningham et al., Reference Cunningham, Mulham, Milthorpe and Leigh1992). All three shrubs are relatively long-lived, moderately palatable to livestock and often promote circular-shaped mounds beneath their canopies as a result of resource capture (Eldridge et al., Reference Eldridge, Westoby and Stanley1990; Emmerson and Facelli, Reference Emmerson and Facelli1996). Our study site is grazed by unrestricted populations of kangaroos (Macropus spp.) and goats (Capra hircus) across the entire productivity gradient.
Site data collection
We selected a total of six sites, two each in low (ranges), intermediate (footslopes) and high (plains) productivity areas, separated by distances of at least 3 km (Figure 1a). At each site, we selected 10 individual plants of M. pyramidata (which occurred at all six sites) and 10 individuals of a second species, either Maireana astrotricha (in low and intermediate productivity) or M. aphylla (high productivity only). Plants were selected to encompass a range of sizes (height and diameter) and only aboveground biomass was measured. It was not possible to have all species present at all sites.
We placed a 30-cm-diameter circular quadrat beneath each shrub between the midline and the canopy edge within which we recorded the morphological and biological features of the soil surface according to the method of Tongway (Reference Tongway1995). This was paired with a location in the interspace about 50 cm from the canopy edge of each plant. Within each quadrat, we assessed the following: 1) Surface roughness or microtopography is important because rougher surfaces have a greater ability to retain abiotic and biotic resources and to act as microsites for seeds. Surface roughness was assessed on a four-point scale from 1 (average roughness <3 mm) to 5 (deep depressions or cracks). 2) Crust resistance provides a measure of mechanical strength and therefore the likelihood that the crust will break up. It was assessed on a four-point scale from 1 (uncrusted or loose surface) to 5 (very hard and brittle). 3) Soil stability assesses how well the soil surface resists erosion and was assessed on a five-point scale of 1 (very unstable in water, as assessed using the Emerson slake test – Emerson, Reference Emerson1967) to 5 (extremely stable in water). 4) The absence of erosion was assessed as 1 (>50% evidence of erosion) to 5 (<10% erosion; see Tongway, Reference Tongway1995). The plant-related attributes were visually estimated within the same quadrat. Litter cover and depth, and plant foliage and basal cover were estimated from within the circular quadrat.
After measuring surface condition, we collected a soil sample from the surface 5–10 cm from beneath each of the 10 plants of both shrub species at each of six sites and a sample from the paired interspace, resulting in a total of 240 soil samples (two shrub species by two positions by 10 samples by six sites). Shrub volume was used as our measure of size and was calculated using the formula for an ellipsoid (volume = 4/3 π abc) where a, b and c are the semi-principal axes of the ellipsoid, i.e. a = half of the longest diameter through the centre, b is half of the diameter perpendicular to the longest diameter and c is half of the height.
Laboratory analyses
Soil samples were analysed for pH on a 1:5 soil water extract using the smartCHEM – Lab multi-parameter analyser (TPS Pty Ltd., Brendale Australia; Rayment and Lyons, Reference Rayment and Lyons2011). Soil labile carbon determination followed the methods of Weil et al. (Reference Weil, Islam, Stine, Gruver and Samson-Liebig2002) and was measured using spectroscopy at 550 nm wavelength (UV mini-1240 spectrophotometer, Shimadzu, Japan). Nitrates and ammonium soil extraction followed methods by Keeney and Nelson (Reference Keeney, Nelson and Page1982). Available phosphorus (Olsen method) was calculated following Rayment and Lyons (Reference Rayment and Lyons2011), best suited for alkaline soils (pH ranging from 7 to 10). XRF analysis (50 kV Vanta M-series, Olympus, USA) was used to measure the content of trace minerals Ca, Fe and K.
Statistical analyses
We compared the effects of three shrub species (M. pyramidata, M. and M. aphylla) on 16 soil physical, chemical and functional attributes with values in the adjacent unvegetated interspaces. The input data represented the relative difference between an attribute beneath the canopy and the value in the interspace for each shrub-interspace pair, i.e. (shrub − interspace) / (shrub + interspace). A positive (or negative) value of this standardised value, referred to as the relative interaction intensity (RII, sensu Armas et al., Reference Armas, Ordiales and Pugnaire2004), indicates a greater (or lesser) value of that attribute, respectively, beneath the shrubs. RII values range from −1 to 1, with positive values indicating greater levels of a given attribute beneath the island and vice versa. We refer to this RII as the relative fertile island effect. Evidence of the fertile island effect (either positive or negative) is based on whether the 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs), calculated using ‘Rmisc’ package in R (R Core Team, 2018), cross the zero line.
The RII values for the 16 attributes were assembled into three broad functional proxies related to soil fertility (based on soil NH4, NO3, Ca, Fe, labile C, pH, P and K, hereafter ‘fertility’), 2) ecosystem stability (based on the absence of surface erosion, surface resistance, roughness and stability, hereafter ‘integrity’) and 3) plant attributes, based on plant basal and foliage cover, and litter cover and depth (hereafter ‘plant’).
We examined how the fertile island effect differed in relation to productivity (using the three categorical variables of ranges, footslopes and plains), shrub species and shrub volume using a Bayesian hierarchical linear mixed model. Our RII values were modelled with a Gaussian (normal) distribution, with all individual ecosystem attributes (n = 16) estimated simultaneously in a single model. The standardised response variable (RII) was modelled hierarchically as a function of landform (ranges, slopes and plains), shrub species (M. pyramidata, M. astrotricha and M. aphylla), shrub volume (continuous data) and functional category (fertility, integrity and plant). The model fitted individual ecosystem functional attributes as groups (random intercepts) with varying slopes associated with landform and shrub species. We also included interactions between the three functional categories, and landform and shrub species to account for potential differences in the effects of each covariate within each ecosystem function category. Site was included as a random intercept to account for potential nonindependence from the same plot.
We specified weakly informative normally distributed priors for the intercept and all regression coefficients (mean = 0 and scale = 2.5). Default priors were used for sigma (exponential, rate = 1) and variance–covariance matrix of the varying intercepts and slope parameters (shape and scale of 1). We used posterior simulations of model parameters with the No-U-Turn Hamiltonian Monte Carlo sampler (Stan, Carpenter et al., Reference Carpenter2017). Posterior distributions were estimated from four chains, each with 1000 iterations, after discarding the preliminary 1000 iterations. Visual diagnostics (autocorrelation, trace plots and posterior predictive checks) and effective sample size examination (min. 1000) and r^ values (<1.01) were used to assess model convergence. Models were fitted using the package ‘rstanarm’ (Goodrich et al., Reference Goodrich, Gabry, Ali and Brilleman2020) within R (R Core Team, 2018). A hierarchical model provides several benefits over simple averaging of standardised indicators or multiple separate models (McElreath, Reference McElreath2020): (i) simultaneous modelling of multiple attributes improves precision and estimates of uncertainty for each ecosystem function category; (ii) nonindependence of multiple attributes within sites is explicitly accounted for; (iii) enables simultaneous estimation of overall fertile island effect for each ecosystem functional category and the individual soil attributes within these (Eldridge et al., Reference Eldridge, Ding and Dorrough2024).
Results
We found strong evidence of an increase in the strength of the fertile island effect with increasing plant size (H1) but no effect of productivity (H2). There were strong fertile island effects for all species in all productivity levels, though the sign of the effects varied among attributes (Figure 2). Seventy percent of a possible 96 attributes by productivity-level effects were significant, and of these, 54% (52) were significantly positive and 16% (14) significantly negative (Figure 2). Trends across levels of productivity were generally similar, i.e. either consistently significantly positive (e.g. surface roughness, foliage cover, basal plant cover and soil carbon) or consistently nonsignificant (e.g. soil resistance and soil stability). Only two attributes (e.g. NH4 and cover of erosion) showed inconsistent effects across productivity levels. The fertile island effect for the plant-related function (estimate = 0.82, P < 0.001) was considerably greater than functions related to surface integrity or soil fertility, and this was irrespective of productivity or shrub species (Figure 3).
Overall, we found that larger shrubs had stronger fertile island effects overall (estimate = 0.36, P = 0.001; Table S2), though this was largely due to shrub size effects under moderate productivity (footslopes), as increasing plant size was associated with declines in the effects under high (plains, model estimate = −0.26) and low (model estimate = −0.22) productivity compared with intermediate productivity (footslopes, Figure 4). Plant basal cover (F 1,118 = 5.90, P = 0.017), soil nitrate (F 1,94 = 12.68, P = 0.0006), soil ammonium (F 1,94 = 17.94, P = 0.0016) and soil labile carbon (F 1,114 = 5.17, P = 0.025) increased significantly with increasing shrub volume, but there were no significant effects for the other 12 attributes (Figure 5). Increases in the volume of M. pyramidata were associated with significant increases in the overall fertile island effect (model estimate = 0.10, PD = 98.1%, Figure 6, Table S1).
Discussion
We sought to test two predictions related to the fertile island effect in an arid shrubland, examining the effects of three conspecific shrubs growing across a gradient in productivity driven by changes in geomorphology. Our first hypothesis was upheld, with clear increases in the strength of the fertile island effect with increasing shrub size, though this effect varied weakly among functions and depending on productivity (Figure 5). Contrary to prediction, we found that the strength of the island effect was consistent across the productivity gradient, irrespective of shrub species or specific function (Figure 3). Overall, our results reaffirm the view that larger plants have a stronger enrichment effect on their understorey biotic and abiotic environment, irrespective of productivity, and even within a narrow range of plant sizes. This knowledge advances our understanding of resource distribution in drylands and provides important information for practitioners to focus on the conservation and restoration of larger plants when targeting the restoration of degraded shrublands.
Shrubs promote fertile islands irrespective of productivity
Overall, the fertile island effect was apparent in 70% of the shrub–attribute combinations, irrespective of productivity, species identity or shrub size (Figure 2). However, island effects were stronger for fertility, principally due to increasing ammonium, nitrate and phosphorus enrichment (Figure 5). Nitrate enrichment has been demonstrated in fertile islands (e.g. Iwaoka et al., Reference Iwaoka, Imada, Taniguchi, Du, Yamanaka and Tateno2018) due to both increased nitrogen mineralisation resulting from microbial decomposition in plant mounds (Li et al., Reference Li, Chen, Li, Bu, Jin, Wei and Li2021), ammonium-oxidising bacteria beneath the plants (Trivedi et al., Reference Trivedi, Reich, Maestre, Hu, Singh and Delgado-Baquerizo2019) and/or the presence of nitrate-reducing bacteria such as Stenotrophomonas (Palleroni, Reference Palleroni, Trujillo, Dedysh, DeVos, Hedlund, Kämpfer, Rainey and Whitman2015; Sly et al., Reference Sly, Wen and Fegan2015) in the interspaces. Furthermore, bacterial communities have been shown to differ in their nutritional strategies between interspaces (oligotrophs) and islands (copiotrophs). For example, Actinomycetota and Bacteroidota tend to occur beneath plant canopies, whereas Acidobacteriota (oligotroph) tend to occur in the bare interspaces (Xiang et al., Reference Xiang, Gibbons, Li, Shen, Fang and Chu2018; Doniger et al., Reference Doniger, Adams, Marais and Maggs-Kölling2020). The process of resource capture and retention is critically important in drylands where resources are scarce and have a patchy distribution. Our results highlight the contribution of shrubs to the maintenance of stability and resilience of dryland ecosystems, and this contribution will likely increase as climates become hotter, drier and more variable.
Greater function associated with larger plants
Plant volume, our proxy of size, was the attribute most strongly associated with resource supplementation, with larger plants associated with more functional islands, but only for soil fertility, and mostly in areas of moderate productivity (footslopes). Larger plants have a stronger effect on resource enrichment (Garner and Steinberger, Reference Garner and Steinberger1989; de Soyza et al., Reference De Soyza, Franco, Virginia, Reynolds and Whitford1996; Ward et al., Reference Ward, Trinogga, Wiegand, du Toit, Okubamichael, Reinsch and Schleicher2018; Ochoa-Ochoa‐Hueso et al., Reference Ochoa‐Hueso, Eldridge, Delgado‐Baquerizo, Soliveres, Bowker, Gross, Le Bagousse‐Pinguet, Quero, García‐Gómez and Valencia2018; Ding and Eldridge, Reference Ding and Eldridge2024) due to more litter shedding, the production of larger pools of organic matter and, therefore, more nitrogen beneath the canopies (Trivedi et al., Reference Trivedi, Reich, Maestre, Hu, Singh and Delgado-Baquerizo2019). Larger plants are also focal points for meso- and macrofaunal activity (Dean et al., Reference Dean, Milton and Jeltsch1999) and provide more shade, sequestering more carbon (Lal, Reference Lal2019), thus providing more biomass, which in turn provides additional resources for other organisms that drive nutrient cycling (Bahram et al., Reference Bahram, Hildebrand and Forslund2018). Our three shrub species are known to live for more than half a century (Lay, Reference Lay, Graetz and Howes1979) and are considered important due to their large size (Yan et al., Reference Yan, Holm and Mitchell1996), which makes them critical habitat for plants (Emmerson and Facelli, Reference Emmerson and Facelli1996) and refugia for animals during dry times (Eldridge and Rath, Reference Eldridge and Rath2002).
In our study, plant size was skewed towards smaller plants, with very few larger plants. Only two plants M. pyramidata (low productivity, 1.7 m3) and M. aphylla (high productivity, 1.9 m3) exceeded 1.5 m3 in volume. Yet, removing these two very large shrubs did not alter our results, with larger plants still associated with greater function (model estimate = 0.32), and plant function was still stronger than either fertility or integrity functions (model estimate = 0.80). The predominance of smaller shrubs could result from grazing by goats, particularly during droughts. All three shrub species are moderately palatable to livestock (Eldridge et al., Reference Eldridge, Westoby and Stanley1990), but the distribution of grazing by sheep, feral goats and kangaroos is relatively uniform across the study site, so we are confident that older shrubs are generally larger. Shrub size is a general proxy of age in woody plants (Day et al., Reference Day, Greenwood and Diaz-Sala2002), at least during the early stages of growth, and older shrubs are likely to be larger and therefore have a greater effect on resource accumulation beneath their canopy. We used shrub size as our predictor of the fertile island effect because it is easy to measure, strongly related to age and we know that larger plants produce and trap more resources. We acknowledge that grazing complicates this relationship, so heavily grazed smaller shrubs might be relatively older than ungrazed larger shrubs. Data on woody plant age are difficult to obtain, particularly in drylands. We suggest that where possible, future studies should endeavour to sample a wider range of shrub sizes that include more larger shrubs.
Global studies indicate that canopy structure is important for promoting and maintaining organic matter and nutrients, particularly for hemispherical-shaped plants (Li et al., Reference Li, Zhao, Zhu, Li and Wang2007). Plant height and crown width have been shown to be important, potentially by increasing threshold wind velocities in the vicinity of shrubs, causing aeolian material to be deposited close to and within the canopy (Yan et al., Reference Yan, Xu, Wang, Cai and Jing2019), which intensifies with increasing basal cover (Field et al., Reference Field, Breshears, Whicker and Zou2012). Larger plants also have a greater hydrological effect on their surrounding environments, intercepting more rainfall because of their higher leaf area index (Whitford et al., Reference Whitford, Anderson and Rice1997), and therefore potentially greater enhancement of soil moisture beneath their canopies. These effects were greater under plants with larger canopies despite the effects of larger plants infiltrating further into the interspaces (Dunkerley, Reference Dunkerley2002).
Compared with functions associated with surface integrity and fertility, the greatest effect of islands was on understorey plants and litter, and this effect was independent of shrub species identity. Our results suggest that resource enrichment is a signature of individual shrubs rather than an effect due to a specific geomorphic position that might differ in productivity. Our results showed that island effects were strongest for biotic factors (Figure 2.). Attributes associated with plants (plant cover and litter cover) far exceeded those associated with either soil fertility or soil structural stability. Furthermore, this positive effect of shrubs on plant function was independent of productivity, though there were some weak shrub size and species identity effects (Figure 3.). The strong plant size effect could also be related to the fact that larger plants tend to have more of their foliage skirting the soil surface. This trait has been identified as an important driver of function in a range of shrubs globally (Eldridge et al., Reference Eldridge, Bowker, Maestre, Roger, Reynolds and Whitford2011; Ding and Eldridge, Reference Ding and Eldridge2024) and relates to the ability of plants to intercept aeolian material. Canopy soil contact is a key driver of processes involved in the formation of nebkhas (El-Bana et al., Reference El-Bana, Nijs and Kockelbergh2002).
Conclusions
The ability of shrubs to capture and sequester resources, improve soil fertility, support understorey plants and animals and provide forage for livestock and native herbivores during dry periods, yet survive long periods of drought stress, makes them particularly valuable in drylands (Ward et al., Reference Ward, Trinogga, Wiegand, du Toit, Okubamichael, Reinsch and Schleicher2018). We show that plant size is a critically important determinant of the strength of the fertile island effect, even for plants within a narrow range of sizes. Our work complements previous work showing that the fertile island effect increases with increasing plant size across a large size gradient from small grasses to tall trees. This knowledge is important because it gives us important insights into the functional benefits of rewilding using plant species of different traits. Larger plants are likely to have a greater effect on their understorey environment, and together with their value as habitat, this makes them key species to include in any restoration programme in drylands.
Open peer review
For open peer review materials, please visit http://doi.org/10.1017/dry.2024.4.
Supplementary material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at http://doi.org/10.1017/dry.2024.4.
Acknowledgements
We thank the Oatley Flora and Fauna Conservation Society for providing funding to CF to undertake the work and Dr Josh Dorrough for guiding us through the statistical analyses. DJE is supported by the Hermon Slade Foundation and JS by the New South Wales Department of Climate Change, Energy, Environment and Water.
Competing interest
The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
Comments
THE UNIVERSITY OF
NEW SOUTH WALES
DAVID ELDRIDGE
Professor
School of Biological,
Earth and Environmental Sciences
Dear Editors
Please find attached the manuscript ‘The fertile island effect is stronger for larger plants irrespective of ecosystem productivity’ which we would like you to consider publishing in PRISMS Drylands.
Dryland productivity and function are optimised when critical resources are concentrated in discrete patches known as fertile patches or fertile islands. These islands are known to be critically important because they provide habitat for organisms, an important drought reserve, and act as sites for re-establishment of biota after restoration.
We have a relatively good understanding of fertile islands, but it is unclear how the strength of the fertile island effect is influenced by the size of plants that make up the fundamental components of the islands. We know for example that size is important across large gradients in size, but it is unclear whether size is important within a narrow range of species, particularly from the same plant form or family. It is also unclear how the fertile island effect varies across gradients in productivity.
Here we report on a study where we examined the fertile island effect across a gradient in productivity, and plant size for species in the same genus with a similar morphology. We found that plant size was highly correlated with the fertile island effect irrespective of productivity. Our results have important implications for restoration programs involving shrub plantings where the aim is to enhance the functionality of degraded dryland systems.
Thank you for considering this manuscript for publication in PRISMS Drylands.
We hope that the contents of the manuscript will interest the journal’s readership.
Yours sincerely
David J. Eldridge for the authors
June 23, 2024