We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Trade-Offs in Seed Dispersal Strategies Across Riparian Trees: The How Matters as Much as the When.
- Authors
González, E.; Bourgeois, B.; Masip, A.; Sher, A. A.
- Abstract
Riparian Salicaceae are prolific producers of short-lived seeds that require very restrictive hydro-geomorphic conditions for establishment. It is generally assumed that if floods are able to create nursery sites timed with seed dispersal, recruitment will occur. Other spatial and temporal seed dispersal patterns besides the dispersal period have historically received little attention. However, seed dispersal patterns can be highly variable between regions, species and over the years. In this paper, we report the seed dispersal patterns of three dominant riparian Salicaceae trees in Europe: Populus alba, P. nigra and Salix alba to suggest possible trade-offs between seed dispersal patterns, germinability, longevity and establishment. Seed rain of the three species was monitored in 33 glue-coated traps for three months yearly from 2006 to 2008 in an 8-km stretch of the Middle Ebro River (N Spain), which has a pluvio-nival regime. P. alba dispersed seeds earlier during a shorter time period and with a fewer number of seed release pulses compared with P. nigra, and especially with S. alba. With overlapping seed dispersal periods, the two latter species occupy similar landform units but rarely compete with P. alba, usually at higher elevations, as shown in a previous study in the same study area. The three species had very high germinability immediately after release (>90%), but longevity in S. alba was eight times shorter than that of its two Populus counterparts. We suggest that S. alba has compensated its lower seed quality with a more spaced seed release in several pulses of similar magnitude. With similar seed dispersal patterns and germinability but a higher longevity, P. nigra had a much higher density of individuals than S. alba in the recruitment zones of the study area. We hope that our results may inform river managers about how to optimize river flows to promote sexual regeneration of these species. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
- Subjects
BLACK poplar; GERMINATION; SEED dispersal; POPULUS alba; SALIX alba
- Publication
River Research & Applications, 2016, Vol 32, Issue 4, p786
- ISSN
1535-1459
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/rra.2899