Data from: Environmental drivers of mast-seeding in Mediterranean oak species: does leaf habit matter?
Understanding the proximate factors that govern the widespread mast-seeding process is a question of considerable interest that remains poorly understood. The identity and effect of these factors may vary among coexisting species that differ in leaf habit, potentially resulting in temporally asynchr...
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding the proximate factors that govern the widespread
mast-seeding process is a question of considerable interest that remains
poorly understood. The identity and effect of these factors may vary among
coexisting species that differ in leaf habit, potentially resulting in
temporally asynchronous patterns of seed production. In this study we aim
to identify the proximate causes of mast-seeding using two oak species
with contrasting leaf habit that coexist in southern Spain, the deciduous
Quercus canariensis and the evergreen Q. suber. Simultaneously, we review
the literature on environmental drivers of mast-seeding in Mediterranean
oaks, distinguishing between evergreen and deciduous species. Our results
indicate that Mediterranean oaks are primarily sensitive to weather,
mast-seeding being strongly correlated with water availability and air
temperature, mainly in the spring and summer. The two study oak species
were affected by weather in quite different ways, most likely because of
different abiotic requirements as well as contrasting functional
strategies of resource use and biomass allocation. Specifically, annual
seed production in Q. canariensis was more severely limited by drought
than in Q. suber, but responded positively to warmer spring temperatures.
Q. canariensis showed a large interannual variability, whereas Q. suber
exhibited much more constant seed production. These two species also
exhibited a very low level of synchrony in their temporal patterns of seed
crop size, most likely due to phenological differences in the processes of
flowering and seed maturation. Synthesis. Our results indicate that
weather plays a crucial role as a proximate driver of mast-seeding in
Mediterranean oaks. We hypothesize that the current abundance of
co-occurring species that differ in leaf habit could be altered under
future climate change scenarios. The decline of seed production with drier
conditions will be potentially greater in deciduous species, particularly
those inhabiting wetter sites. Alternatively, the expected warmer
temperatures could negatively affect evergreen species as a consequence of
their more conservative strategy of biomass allocation. Our findings
suggest that understanding how species with different functional or
phenological attributes adjust their reproductive abilities to weather may
enable us to infer the effects of ongoing environmental changes on
population recruitment and dynamics. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.p0h0v |