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      Crossing Scales: The Complexity of Barrier-Island Processes for Predicting Future Change

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          Cross-Scale Morphology, Geometry, and Dynamics of Ecosystems

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            Original Articles: Ecological Resilience, Biodiversity, and Scale

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              Global shifts towards positive species interactions with increasing environmental stress.

              The study of positive species interactions is a rapidly evolving field in ecology. Despite decades of research, controversy has emerged as to whether positive and negative interactions predictably shift with increasing environmental stress as hypothesised by the stress-gradient hypothesis (SGH). Here, we provide a synthesis of 727 tests of the SGH in plant communities across the globe to examine its generality across a variety of ecological factors. Our results show that plant interactions change with stress through an outright shift to facilitation (survival) or a reduction in competition (growth and reproduction). In a limited number of cases, plant interactions do not respond to stress, but they never shift towards competition with stress. These findings are consistent across stress types, plant growth forms, life histories, origins (invasive vs. native), climates, ecosystems and methodologies, though the magnitude of the shifts towards facilitation with stress is dependent on these factors. We suggest that future studies should employ standardised definitions and protocols to test the SGH, take a multi-factorial approach that considers variables such as plant traits in addition to stress, and apply the SGH to better understand how species and communities will respond to environmental change. © 2013 Blackwell Publishing Ltd/CNRS.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                BioScience
                BioScience
                Oxford University Press (OUP)
                0006-3568
                1525-3244
                December 29 2016
                January 01 2017
                : 67
                : 1
                : 39-52
                Article
                10.1093/biosci/biw154
                984122a8-8f2f-43f6-8204-2bd0b6092ace
                © 2016
                History

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