DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcaf184 ISSN: 0305-7364

Soil water-holding capacity does not mediate aridity effects on plant functional traits in Iberian dune ecosystems

Xoaquín Moreira, Fernando T Maestre, Laura García-Velázquez, Carla Vázquez-González, Everaldo Dos Santos, Joana Serôdio, Cristina Saez-Asensio, Alexandra Rodríguez, Jorge Durán

Abstract

Background and Aims

Aridity drives plant adaptations such as reduced stature, sclerophyllous leaves, and increased phenolic production. While these patterns are well documented, the role of soil properties in modulating aridity's impact remains understudied. Trait responses may also vary—converging, diverging, or uncorrelated—across intraspecific and community levels, adding complexity to predictions of ecological responses to arid conditions.

Methods

We investigated how aridity influences six plant functional traits—lateral spread, maximum height, leaf area, specific leaf area (SLA), and the concentrations of total phenolics and flavonoids—at both the species level (focusing on Helichrysum italicum, the dominant species across the surveyed sites) and the community level across 24 dune ecosystems along the Atlantic–Mediterranean coastline of the Iberian Peninsula. We also collected soil samples and used piecewise structural equation modelling to assess whether physico-chemical soil variables— water-holding capacity, nutrient availability, pH, and organic matter content—mediate the effects of aridity on plant functional traits.

Key results

We found a significant negative relationship between aridity and both plant height and lateral spread in H. italicum, while leaf area, SLA, total phenolics, and flavonoids were not significantly affected. At the community level, aridity was also negatively associated with plant height and lateral spread, positively associated with SLA, and showed no significant relationship with the concentrations of phenolic compounds. Importantly, water-holding capacity was the only soil variable correlated (positively) with aridity; however, the influence of aridity on plant functional traits was not mediated by variation in this factor.

Conclusions

This study demonstrates that aridity consistently influences structural plant traits across species and community levels in Iberian dune ecosystems, with largely convergent responses across organismal scales, and these patterns occur independently of key soil variables such as water-holding capacity.

More from our Archive