Do key dimensions of seed and seedling functional trait variation capture variation in recruitment probability?

被引:0
作者
Julie E. Larson
Roger L. Sheley
Stuart P. Hardegree
Paul S. Doescher
Jeremy J. James
机构
[1] Oregon State University,Environmental Sciences Graduate Program
[2] United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service,College of Forestry
[3] United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service,Sierra Foothills Research and Extension Center
[4] Oregon State University,Schmid College of Science and Technology
[5] University of California Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources,undefined
[6] Chapman University,undefined
来源
Oecologia | 2016年 / 181卷
关键词
Emergence; Germination; Plant functional type; Roots; Survival;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Seedling recruitment is a critical driver of population dynamics and community assembly, yet we know little about functional traits that define different recruitment strategies. For the first time, we examined whether trait relatedness across germination and seedling stages allows the identification of general recruitment strategies which share core functional attributes and also correspond to recruitment outcomes in applied settings. We measured six seed and eight seedling traits (lab- and field-collected, respectively) for 47 varieties of dryland grasses and used principal component analysis (PCA) and cluster analysis to identify major dimensions of trait variation and to isolate trait-based recruitment groups, respectively. PCA highlighted some links between seed and seedling traits, suggesting that relative growth rate and root elongation rate are simultaneously but independently associated with seed mass and initial root mass (first axis), and with leaf dry matter content, specific leaf area, coleoptile tissue density and germination rate (second axis). Third and fourth axes captured separate tradeoffs between hydrothermal time and base water potential for germination, and between specific root length and root mass ratio, respectively. Cluster analysis separated six recruitment types along dimensions of germination and growth rates, but classifications did not correspond to patterns of germination, emergence or recruitment in the field under either of two watering treatments. Thus, while we have begun to identify major threads of functional variation across seed and seedling stages, our understanding of how this variation influences demographic processes—particularly germination and emergence—remains a key gap in functional ecology.
引用
收藏
页码:39 / 53
页数:14
相关论文
共 185 条
[1]  
Baraloto C(2005)Seed mass, seedling size and neotropical tree seedling establishment J Ecol 93 1156-1166
[2]  
Forget P-M(1988)Germination ecophysiology of herbaceous plant species in a temperate region Am J Bot 75 286-305
[3]  
Goldberg DE(2010)Towards an assessment of multiple ecosystem processes and services via functional traits Biodivers Conserv 19 2873-2893
[4]  
Baskin CC(2012)Community assembly along a soil depth gradient: contrasting patterns of plant trait convergence and divergence in a Mediterranean rangeland J Ecol 100 1422-1433
[5]  
Baskin JM(1993)A functional classification of wetland plants J Veg Sci 4 591-600
[6]  
Bello Fd(2000)Seed germination in desert annuals: an empirical test of adaptive bet hedging Am Nat 155 168-186
[7]  
Bernard-Verdier M(2015)Will among-population variation in seed traits improve the chance of species persistence under climate change? Glob Ecol Biogeogr 24 12-24
[8]  
Navas M-L(2009)Community assembly and shifts in plant trait distributions across an environmental gradient in coastal California Ecol Monogr 79 109-126
[9]  
Vellend M(2011)Seed survival in soil: interacting effects of predation, dormancy and the soil microbial community J Ecol 99 89-95
[10]  
Violle C(2004)The plant traits that drive ecosystems: evidence from three continents J Veg Sci 15 295-304