Recent clonal reproduction of Cryptomeria japonica in a snowy region revealed by a survey of small-sized ramets

Clonal reproduction may contribute to population maintenance in areas where disturbance caused by snow limits tree recruitment. To understand the importance of clonal reproduction in the population dynamics of canopy tree species, it is necessary to determine the frequency of clonal reproduction in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Silvae genetica 2020-01, Vol.69 (1), p.152-157
Hauptverfasser: Kimura, Megumi K., Nagashima, Takashi, Kamitani, Tomohiko, Sakio, Hitoshi, Tsumura, Yoshihiko
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container_end_page 157
container_issue 1
container_start_page 152
container_title Silvae genetica
container_volume 69
creator Kimura, Megumi K.
Nagashima, Takashi
Kamitani, Tomohiko
Sakio, Hitoshi
Tsumura, Yoshihiko
description Clonal reproduction may contribute to population maintenance in areas where disturbance caused by snow limits tree recruitment. To understand the importance of clonal reproduction in the population dynamics of canopy tree species, it is necessary to determine the frequency of clonal reproduction in the early stages of seedling establishment. We found 106 ramets, including “small-sized” ramets of less than 5 cm in diameter at breast height, aggregated within 4 patches in a 70 × 50 m plot and also identified 20 genets among these ramets with the use of nuclear microsatellite markers. The size structure of the ramets revealed an inverse J-shaped distribution, suggesting that continuous recruitment of new ramets occurs. However, the number of intermediate-sized ramets (around 10 cm DBH) at the present study site was small, suggesting that most new ramets die while they are still small by pressure from heavy snow. Of the 20 genets, 12 included one or more small-sized ramets, which indicated recent recruitment. Of the 12 genets, 3 included only a single small-sized ramet, which suggested seedling recruitment, whereas the other 9 included multiple ramets (39 small-sized ramets in total), which indicated clonal recruitment. The frequency (9/12) and number (39/9) of recent clonal recruits suggest that clonal reproduction effectively maintains the population of in snowy regions.
doi_str_mv 10.2478/sg-2020-0020
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source De Gruyter Open Access Journals; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection; Sciendo
subjects Clonal diversity
conifer
layering
microsatellite marker
seedling recruitment
title Recent clonal reproduction of Cryptomeria japonica in a snowy region revealed by a survey of small-sized ramets
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