Shifting demographic conflicts across recruitment cohorts in a dynamic post-disturbance landscape
Identifiers
Permanent link (URI): http://hdl.handle.net/10017/37757DOI: 10.1002/ecy.1527
ISSN: 0012-9658
Date
2016Funders
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación
Comunidad de Madrid
Ministerio de Ciencia y Educación
Bibliographic citation
Ecology, 2016, v. 97, n. , p. 2628-2639
Keywords
Biological legacy
Garrulus glandarius
Holm oak
Life-stage conflict
Ontogeny
Pine plantation
Plant demography
Post-fire succession
Quercus ilex
Seed dispersal
Project
CGL2008-01671 y CGL2014-53308-P (Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación)
S2009AMB-1783 'REMEDINAL-2 y S2013/MAE-2719 'REMEDINAL-3 (Comunidad de Madrid)
AP2010-0272 fellowship (Ministerio de Ciencia y Educación)
Document type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Version
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
© 2016 Ecological Society of America
Access rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Abstract
Seed dispersal effectiveness, which measures the number of adult plant individuals
produced by seed dispersal, is the product of the number of seeds dispersed and the probability
a seed produces an adult. Directed dispersal to certain habitat types may enhance some stages
of recruitment but disfavor others, generating demographic conflicts in plant ontogeny. We
asked whether temporal changes in habitat features may affect the distribution of seedlings
recruited from dispersed acorns, and whether this could induce shifts in the life-stage
conflicts
experienced by successive cohorts of naturally recruited plants. As early successional habitats
are characterized by rapid change, we used a burnt pine stand in southern Spain to monitor the
recruitment and performance of a major tree species (Quercus ilex) across 7 yr in four types of
post-fire
habitats. These differed in structure and included patches of unburnt forest and three
management alternatives of burnt trees: logging, partial cutting, and nonintervention. Young
oaks that resprouted after the fire were mainly located near acorn sources, while new seedlings
initially emerged mostly in habitats with standing snags due to habitat selection by European
jays, Garrulus glandarius, for dispersal. The dead pines gradually collapsed and attracted less
dispersal, so subsequent seedling cohorts mainly recruited within patches of unburnt pines.
These live pines enhanced the survival of the oaks located beneath their canopy but greatly
reduced their growth as compared to the other post-fire
habitats, thus representing a
demographic conflict that was absent elsewhere. As a consequence of the directional shift in the
habitat where seedlings recruited, successive seedling cohorts experienced a gradual
improvement in their likelihood of survival but a reduction in growth. The progressive
intensification of this life-stage
conflict hinged on the reduction of vertical structures in the
habitat with standing burnt pines. Recruitment success thus involved temporal variation in the
habitat where recruitment occurred, likely resulting from changes in the direction of seed
dispersal, and spatial variation in habitat suitability for seedling establishment and growth.
Temporal changes in habitat structure can indirectly change the environment in which
recruitment occurs, and consequently seed dispersal effectiveness, by shifting the direction of
seed dispersal.
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Files | Size | Format |
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shifting_leverkus_ESA_2016.pdf | 2.168Mb |
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