The replacement of arborescent cactus species along a climatic gradient in the southern Chihuahuan Desert: Competitive hierarchies and response to freezing temperatures
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In the southern region of the southern Chihuahuan Desert three common species of arborescent cacti are distributed over a north-west to south-east climatic gradient; Opuntia leucotricha, O. streptacantha, and Myrtillocactus geometrizans. In general, O. leucotricha is more abundant in the colder north-west section; M. geometrizans in the warmer south-east zone, not occurring in the north-west; and O. streptacantha reaches its greatest abundance in the centre of the region. We studied the potential replacement process between the three species due to canopy interference as well as the effect of a disturbance, freezing temperature, on their survivorship. Canopy interference between adjacent individuals of M. geometrizans/O. streptacantha and O. streptacantha/O. leucotricha indicated a potential replacement sequence of O. leucotricha replaced by O. streptacantha which, in turn, is replaced by M. geometrizans. In contrast, the damage caused by an extreme low-temperature event hardly affected O. leucotricha. It did however cause severe damage to individuals of O. streptacantha in the north-west of its distribution with little or no damage to individuals in the more south-eastern populations studied. M. geometrizans had a similar pattern of damage to O. streptacantha over its range in the region but at each site where the two species occurred together, that damage was more severe. Our observations suggest that disturbance in the form of extreme freezing temperatures is the mechanism that limits the distribution of these three arborescent cacti in the southern Chihuahuan Desert and allows their co-existence regionally. © 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Canopy interference; Competition; Disturbance; Freezing damage; Mexican central highlands; Myrtillocactus geometrizans; O. streptacantha; Opuntia leucotricha; Southern Chihuahuan Desert abundance; cactus; climate; freezing; replacement; spatial distribution; Chihuahuan Desert; Mexico; United States; Cactaceae; Myrtillocactus; Myrtillocactus geometrizans; Opuntia; Opuntia leucotricha; Opuntia leucotricha; Opuntia streptacantha
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