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Biologist finds hardy plant species could help desert regrowth after damage

Researchers confirm that E. californica plant could help regrowth and resilience in California deserts. This major ecological finding, dubbed the 鈥淕root effect鈥 after an equally resilient Marvel comic book character, could have global application.

While deserts are increasing all over the globe, the health of existing deserts is diminishing. It鈥檚 a rough environment: desert shrubs are repeatedly damaged and cleared by humans as part of agriculture, oil and gas production, and sustainable energy development. 91亚色 Professor and ecologist Christopher Lortie asked the all-important question: what can be done to help regrowth in the desert, to save these thriving habitats for animals and plants?

Lortie led a highly collaborative team of researchers that considered whether the common desert plant Ephedra californica (E. californica) could assist in the reinvigoration of the health of the California desert. His findings, published in Ecology and Evolution (2017), brought forward compelling evidence that will be applicable to other desert environments around the world.

鈥淭he ability for foundation species to recover 鈥 the key finding of our research聽 潭聽 suggests that rehabilitation of desert remnants is more likely to succeed and proceed more rapidly with an intact population of a shrub species present,鈥 Lortie explained.

The research team refers to the positive effect of the E. californica plant on other plants as the 鈥淕root effect,鈥 as a nod to the sentient woody tree that re-sprouted after significant damage in the Guardians of the Galaxy movies. 聽Image 漏 MARVEL

This research was funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) and the Bureau of Land Management. The National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis, UCSB, also supported this research.

Deserts under threat

This work is vital to the planet鈥檚 ecology. Deserts, defined as any location receiving less than 25 centimetres of precipitation per year, occupy more than one-fifth of the Earth鈥檚 surface (National Geographic). They are thriving habitats for plants and animals. However, as they expand, their health is threatened. Global desertification is a pressing issue.

This is Lortie鈥檚 area of expertise. The biologist describes himself as an integrative scientist, which means that he uses a multidisciplinary and cumulative approach to scientific study that synthesizes many disciplines and integrates them when problem solving. His research involves biogeographical comparisons of many forms of community dynamics (plants, animals and people). Research within his lab is primarily focused now on positive interactions between plants and animals in deserts.

Lortie realized that shrubs could help the health of deserts. This is because they are considered a foundational specific in ecology, which is defined by Lortie as 鈥渙ne with significant and often singular impacts on the structure and sometimes functioning, of an ecosystem.鈥 In deserts, shrubs can influence other plants by seed trapping, providing shelter and refuge. This was the starting point of Lortie鈥檚 research.

Researchers considered whether a common desert plant could assist in the reinvigoration of the California desert. Desert, California. (Wikipedia) Credit: photographer Fred Morledge 鈥 Self-photographed, CC BY-SA 2.5

Researchers tested 鈥渞ecovery hypothesis鈥

Lortie鈥檚 study sought to examine whether a common desert shrub species in California, E. californica, could recover from damage introduced during a period of extended drought.

Lortie and collaborators hypothesized or predicted three things:

  1. E. californica is a foundation plant species in one region of California because it will facilitate other plant species.
  2. This desert shrub species will significantly recover from a major physical damage event.
  3. Larger shrubs (estimated by canopy volume) will significantly recover more than relatively smaller shrubs.

Experiment took place in San Joaquin Desert, spanned three years

The study was conducted in the Panoche-Coalinga Area of Environmental Concern and administered by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management聽鈥 within the San Joaquin Desert. This region had experienced a severe and extended 鈥渕ega drought鈥 from 2006-15.

Christopher Lortie on-site in California

The work was executed in collaboration with the Department of Wildlife, Humboldt State University (Arcata, Calif.), and the Bureau of Land Management, Central Coast Field Office (Marina, Calif.). Lortie underscored the collaborative aspect: 鈥淭his work was done in partnership with local managers and agencies to ensure that the findings would be directly relevant.鈥

To study the effects of E. californica on other plant species, the researchers surveyed (measured height and diameter) a total of 225 shrubs annually, at the end of the growing seasons, for three years (2013-16).

Then came the intervention. In 2014, at the end of the winter growing season, the researchers clipped 20 E. californica plants to the ground. In December 2016, after first rains, these shrubs were measured for regrowth and then clipped to the ground again.

The research team then turned its attention to comparing the effects that the E. californica shrubs had on the surrounding plants.

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The effect was positive. 鈥淭he abundances of annual plants were consistently and positively associated with this shrub species聽E. californica in all years,鈥 said Lortie. 鈥淭his shrub clearly and consistently facilitates the abundance of other plant species,鈥 he summarized.

The researchers refer to the positive effect of the E. californica plant on other plants as the 鈥淕root effect,鈥 as a nod to the sentient woody tree that re-sprouted after significant damage in the Guardians of the Galaxy听尘辞惫颈别蝉.

Findings could have global application

This key finding could have wide-reaching application. 鈥淭his is a critical precursor to understanding the role that positive interactions play in human-disturbed systems,鈥 Lortie said, pressing for more research.

To read the article in Ecology and Evolution, visit the . To read a related article published in Ecosphere, visit the . To learn more about Lortie, visit his .

To learn more about Research and Innovation at 91亚色, follow us at , watch the and see the .

By Megan Mueller, manager, research communications, Office of the Vice-President Research and Innovation, 91亚色, muellerm@yorku.ca