Evolutionary ecology of resprouting and seeding in fire-prone ecosystems

被引:459
作者
Pausas, Juli G. [1 ]
Keeley, Jon E. [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] CSIC, CIDE, Valencia 46113, Spain
[2] US Geol Survey, Sequoia Kings Canyon Field Stn, Three Rivers, CA 93271 USA
[3] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA
关键词
fire ecology; iteroparity; monopyric; polypyric; resprouting; seeding; semeplarity; trait evolution; LIFE-HISTORY TYPE; WATER-STRESS TOLERANCE; VEGETATIVE REGENERATION; OVERLAPPING GENERATIONS; PLANT DIVERSIFICATION; ALLOCATION PATTERNS; PERSISTENCE TRAITS; POSTFIRE RESPONSE; CHAPARRAL SHRUBS; SEEDLING GROWTH;
D O I
10.1111/nph.12921
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
There are two broad mechanisms by which plant populations persist under recurrent disturbances: resprouting from surviving tissues, and seedling recruitment. Species can have one of these mechanisms or both. However, a coherent framework explaining the differential evolutionary pressures driving these regeneration mechanisms is lacking. We propose a bottom-up approach in addressing this question that considers the relative survivorship of adults and juveniles in an evolutionary context, based on two assumptions. First, resprouting and seeding can be interpreted by analogy with annual versus perennial life histories; that is, if we consider disturbance cycles to be analogous to annual cycles, then resprouting species are analogous to the perennial life history with iteroparous reproduction, and obligate seeding species that survive disturbances solely through seed banks are analogous to the annual life history with semelparous reproduction. Secondly, changes in the selective regimes differentially modify the survival rates of adults and juveniles and thus the relative costs and benefits of resprouting versus seeding. Our approach provides a framework for understanding temporal and spatial variation in resprouting and seeding under crown-fire regimes. It accounts for patterns of coexistence and environmental changes that contribute to the evolution of seeding from resprouting ancestors.
引用
收藏
页码:55 / 65
页数:11
相关论文
共 36 条
[31]   Fire, aridity and seed banks. What does seed bank composition reveal about community processes in fire-prone desert? [J].
Wright, Boyd R. ;
Clarke, Peter J. .
JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, 2009, 20 (04) :663-674
[32]   Post-fire natural regeneration of fire-prone Mediterranean plant communities in Al-Jabal Al-Akhdar, Libya [J].
Al-Traboulsi, Manal .
BOTANY LETTERS, 2025, 172 (02) :258-269
[33]   Evidence for physiological seed dormancy cycling in the woody shrub Asterolasia buxifolia and its ecological significance in fire-prone systems [J].
Collette, J. C. ;
Ooi, M. K. J. .
PLANT BIOLOGY, 2020, 22 (04) :745-749
[34]   Distinguishing between persistence and dormancy in soil seed banks of three shrub species from fire-prone southeastern Australia [J].
Ooi, Mark K. J. ;
Auld, Tony D. ;
Whelan, Robert J. .
JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, 2007, 18 (03) :405-412
[35]   The third dimension: How fire-related research can advance ecology and evolutionary biology [J].
Lamont, Byron B. ;
He, Tianhua .
IDEAS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2020, 13 (01) :25-58
[36]   Fire ecology of C3 and C4 grasses depends on evolutionary history and frequency of burning but not photosynthetic type [J].
Ripley, Brad ;
Visser, Vernon ;
Christin, Pascal-Antoine ;
Archibald, Sally ;
Martin, Tarryn ;
Osborne, Colin .
ECOLOGY, 2015, 96 (10) :2679-2691