Seedling responses to water pulses in shrubs with contrasting histories of grassland encroachment

Woody plant encroachment into grasslands has occurred worldwide, but it is unclear why some tree and shrub species have been markedly more successful than others. For example, Prosopis velutina has proliferated in many grasslands of the Sonoran Desert in North America over the past century, while ot...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2014-01, Vol.9 (1), p.e87278-e87278
Hauptverfasser: Woods, Steven R, Archer, Steven R, Schwinning, Susan
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Schwinning, Susan
description Woody plant encroachment into grasslands has occurred worldwide, but it is unclear why some tree and shrub species have been markedly more successful than others. For example, Prosopis velutina has proliferated in many grasslands of the Sonoran Desert in North America over the past century, while other shrub species with similar growth form and life history, such as Acacia greggii, have not. We conducted a glasshouse experiment to assess whether differences in early seedling development could help explain why one species and not the other came to dominate many Sonoran Desert grasslands. We established eight watering treatments mimicking a range of natural precipitation patterns and harvested seedlings 16 or 17 days after germination. A. greggii had nearly 7 times more seed mass than P. velutina, but P. velutina emerged earlier (by 3.0±0.3 d) and grew faster (by 8.7±0.5 mg d⁻¹). Shoot mass at harvest was higher in A. greggii (99±6 mg seedling⁻¹) than in P. velutina (74±2 mg seedling⁻¹), but there was no significant difference in root mass (54±3 and 49±2 mg seedling⁻¹, respectively). Taproot elongation was differentially sensitive to water supply: under the highest initial watering pulse, taproots were 52±19 mm longer in P. velutina than in A. greggii. Enhanced taproot elongation under favorable rainfall conditions could give nascent P. velutina seedlings growth and survivorship advantages by helping reduce competition with grasses and maintain contact with soil water during drought. Conversely, A. greggii's greater investment in mass per seed appeared to provide little return in early seedling growth. We suggest that such differences in recruitment traits and their sensitivities to environmental conditions may help explain ecological differences between species that are highly similar as adults and help identify pivotal drivers of shrub encroachment into grasslands.
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Taproot elongation was differentially sensitive to water supply: under the highest initial watering pulse, taproots were 52±19 mm longer in P. velutina than in A. greggii. Enhanced taproot elongation under favorable rainfall conditions could give nascent P. velutina seedlings growth and survivorship advantages by helping reduce competition with grasses and maintain contact with soil water during drought. Conversely, A. greggii's greater investment in mass per seed appeared to provide little return in early seedling growth. 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Taproot elongation was differentially sensitive to water supply: under the highest initial watering pulse, taproots were 52±19 mm longer in P. velutina than in A. greggii. Enhanced taproot elongation under favorable rainfall conditions could give nascent P. velutina seedlings growth and survivorship advantages by helping reduce competition with grasses and maintain contact with soil water during drought. Conversely, A. greggii's greater investment in mass per seed appeared to provide little return in early seedling growth. We suggest that such differences in recruitment traits and their sensitivities to environmental conditions may help explain ecological differences between species that are highly similar as adults and help identify pivotal drivers of shrub encroachment into grasslands.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>Public Library of Science</pub><pmid>24475263</pmid><doi>10.1371/journal.pone.0087278</doi><tpages>e87278</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Acacia - growth & development
Acacia greggii
Adults
Analysis of Variance
Arizona
Biology
Desert Climate
Desert environments
Deserts
Drought
Droughts
Ecology
Ecosystem
Elongation
Encroachment
Environmental conditions
Germination
Grasslands
Growth rate
Larrea tridentata
Life history
Mimicry
Moisture content
Mortality
Native species
Natural resources
Population Dynamics
Precipitation
Precipitation patterns
Prosopis
Prosopis - growth & development
Prosopis glandulosa
Prosopis velutina
Rain
Rainfall
Range management
Recruitment
Seedlings
Seedlings - growth & development
Seeds
Shrubs
Soil moisture
Soil sciences
Soil water
Species
Species Specificity
Studies
Survival
Trees
Water Cycle
Water shortages
Water supply
Water treatment
title Seedling responses to water pulses in shrubs with contrasting histories of grassland encroachment
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