José M Costa, Ruben H Heleno, Pedro Lopes, Jaime A Ramos, Elizabete Marchante, Pablo Vargas, Sérgio Timóteo
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background and aims: Plant populations can recover from wildfires through resprouting (resprouters), by recruiting from in situ surviving seed banks (seeders), or recolonization via seed dispersal. However, it is unclear how complementary these mechanisms can be, especially whether and how specific seed dispersal syndromes are associated with resprouter or seeder potential. In particular, it is unknown whether the occurrence of traits that facilitate seed dispersal and post-fire recolonization are disproportionately frequent among plants that lack other fire-coping strategies (i.e., colonizers).
Methods: Here, we compiled information on the presence of post-fire regeneration mechanisms: resprouting potential, seeding capacity, and presence of traits that facilitate seed dispersal, for 705 species from the European Mediterranean Basin. Three-way contingency tables were built and analysed using log-linear models to assess associations between the three mechanisms.
Key results: We found a negative association between resprouting and seeding capacity, and observed that these mechanisms were independent from having any traits related to seed dispersal. However, traits facilitating endozoochory (fleshy fruits) were more common among resprouters than expected by chance.
Conclusions: Our results show that traits enhancing seed dispersal are widespread among post-fire resprouters and seeding species in the Mediterranean Basin flora. We conclude that seed dispersal traits are mostly an independent backup system assisting the recovery of burned sites rather than an alternative to resprouting or post-fire seeding.
期刊介绍:
Annals of Botany is an international plant science journal publishing novel and rigorous research in all areas of plant science. It is published monthly in both electronic and printed forms with at least two extra issues each year that focus on a particular theme in plant biology. The Journal is managed by the Annals of Botany Company, a not-for-profit educational charity established to promote plant science worldwide.
The Journal publishes original research papers, invited and submitted review articles, ''Research in Context'' expanding on original work, ''Botanical Briefings'' as short overviews of important topics, and ''Viewpoints'' giving opinions. All papers in each issue are summarized briefly in Content Snapshots , there are topical news items in the Plant Cuttings section and Book Reviews . A rigorous review process ensures that readers are exposed to genuine and novel advances across a wide spectrum of botanical knowledge. All papers aim to advance knowledge and make a difference to our understanding of plant science.