Do isolated gallery-forest trees facilitate recruitment of forest seedlings and saplings in savannna?

Facilitation is an ecological process that allows some species to establish in environments they can hardly afford in the absence of the process. This study investigated if the subcanopy of gallery-forest trees isolated in savanna is suitable for the early recruitment of forest woody species. We mea...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta oecologica (Montrouge) 2013-11, Vol.53, p.11-18
Hauptverfasser: Azihou, Akomian Fortuné, Glèlè Kakaï, Romain, Sinsin, Brice
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description Facilitation is an ecological process that allows some species to establish in environments they can hardly afford in the absence of the process. This study investigated if the subcanopy of gallery-forest trees isolated in savanna is suitable for the early recruitment of forest woody species. We measured tree crown area as well as the density of seedlings and saplings of gallery-forest tree species beneath isolated trees and in the savanna matrix along 50 transects of 5-km long and 600 m wide located along four gallery forests. We then tested the nurse-plant effect and Janzen-Connell hypothesis beneath isolated trees. We also examined the relationships between the crown area and the density of seedlings and saplings. Among the eight identified tree species isolated in savanna, only Daniellia oliveri and Khaya senegalensis showed nurse-plant effect and promoted a significant, yet low early recruitment with a seedling-to-sapling survival of 0.044 and 0.578, respectively. The suitability of the subcanopy of isolated trees decreased with the recruitment progression and Janzen-Connell effects were absent. Seedlings had neutral association with the crown area of isolated trees which shifted to positive at the sapling stage. The species of the isolated tree and the crown area explained less than 20% of total variance, indicating that other predictive factors are important in explaining the nurse-plant effect observed in this study. •Isolated individuals of Daniellia oliveri and Khaya senegalensis are nurse plants.•The nurse-plant effect of isolated trees decreases along the recruitment trajectory.•There are no Janzen–Connell effects under the canopy of isolated trees.•The canopy effect grows stronger from the seedling to the sapling stage.
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subjects Animal and plant ecology
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Benin
Biological and medical sciences
Daniellia oliveri
Demecology
Dispersal
Early recruitment
Facilitation
forests
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Janzen–Connell hypothesis
Khaya senegalensis
Plants and fungi
recruitment
saplings
savannas
seedlings
tree crown
variance
woody plants
Woody species
title Do isolated gallery-forest trees facilitate recruitment of forest seedlings and saplings in savannna?
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