Seed removal in two coexisting oak species Ecological consequences of seed size, plant cover and seed-drop timing

Seed predation and dispersal can critically influence plant community structure and dynamics. Inter-specific differences arising at these early stages play a crucial role on tree recruitment patterns, which in turn could influence forest dynamics and species segregation in heterogeneous environments such as Mediterranean forests. We investigated removal rates from acorns set onto the ground in two coexisting Mediterranean oak species - Quercus canariensis and Q. suber - in southern Spain. We developed maximum likelihood estimators to investigate the main factors controlling probabilities of seed removal and to describe species-specific functional responses. To account for inter-specific differences in seed-drop timing, two experiments were established a simultaneous exposure of acorns of the two species (synchronous experiments) and a seed exposure following their natural seed-drop phenology (diachronic experiments). A total of 1536 acorns were experimentally distributed along a wide and natural gradient of plant cover, and removal was periodically monitored for three months at two consecutive years (with contrasting differences in seed production and thus seed availability on the ground). The probability of seed removal increased with plant cover (leaf area index, LAI) for the two oak species. Inter-specific differences in acorn removal were higher in open areas and disappeared in closed microhabitats, especially during a non-mast year. Despite later seed-drop, Q. suber acorns were removed faster and at a higher proportion than those of Q. canariensis. The higher probability of seed removal for this species could be attributed to its larger seed size compared to Q. canariensis, as inter-specific differences were less pronounced when similar sized acorns were exposed. Inter-specific differences in seed removal, arising from seed size variability and microsite heterogeneity, could be of paramount importance in oak species niche separation, driving stand dynamics and composition along environmental gradients. © 2008 The Authors.

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Main Authors: Pérez-Ramos, I. M., Urbieta, I. R., Marañón, T., Zavala, M. A., Kobe, R. K.
Format: journal article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2008
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/3479
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/294353
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spelling dig-inia-es-10261-2943532023-02-20T10:37:53Z Seed removal in two coexisting oak species Ecological consequences of seed size, plant cover and seed-drop timing Pérez-Ramos, I. M. Urbieta, I. R. Marañón, T. Zavala, M. A. Kobe, R. K. Seed predation and dispersal can critically influence plant community structure and dynamics. Inter-specific differences arising at these early stages play a crucial role on tree recruitment patterns, which in turn could influence forest dynamics and species segregation in heterogeneous environments such as Mediterranean forests. We investigated removal rates from acorns set onto the ground in two coexisting Mediterranean oak species - Quercus canariensis and Q. suber - in southern Spain. We developed maximum likelihood estimators to investigate the main factors controlling probabilities of seed removal and to describe species-specific functional responses. To account for inter-specific differences in seed-drop timing, two experiments were established a simultaneous exposure of acorns of the two species (synchronous experiments) and a seed exposure following their natural seed-drop phenology (diachronic experiments). A total of 1536 acorns were experimentally distributed along a wide and natural gradient of plant cover, and removal was periodically monitored for three months at two consecutive years (with contrasting differences in seed production and thus seed availability on the ground). The probability of seed removal increased with plant cover (leaf area index, LAI) for the two oak species. Inter-specific differences in acorn removal were higher in open areas and disappeared in closed microhabitats, especially during a non-mast year. Despite later seed-drop, Q. suber acorns were removed faster and at a higher proportion than those of Q. canariensis. The higher probability of seed removal for this species could be attributed to its larger seed size compared to Q. canariensis, as inter-specific differences were less pronounced when similar sized acorns were exposed. Inter-specific differences in seed removal, arising from seed size variability and microsite heterogeneity, could be of paramount importance in oak species niche separation, driving stand dynamics and composition along environmental gradients. © 2008 The Authors. 2023-02-20T10:37:53Z 2023-02-20T10:37:53Z 2008 journal article Oikos 117(9): 1386-1396 (2008) 0030-1299 http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/3479 http://hdl.handle.net/10261/294353 10.1111/j.0030-1299.2008.16370.x 1600-0706 en none Wiley
institution INIA ES
collection DSpace
country España
countrycode ES
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libraryname Biblioteca del INIA España
language English
description Seed predation and dispersal can critically influence plant community structure and dynamics. Inter-specific differences arising at these early stages play a crucial role on tree recruitment patterns, which in turn could influence forest dynamics and species segregation in heterogeneous environments such as Mediterranean forests. We investigated removal rates from acorns set onto the ground in two coexisting Mediterranean oak species - Quercus canariensis and Q. suber - in southern Spain. We developed maximum likelihood estimators to investigate the main factors controlling probabilities of seed removal and to describe species-specific functional responses. To account for inter-specific differences in seed-drop timing, two experiments were established a simultaneous exposure of acorns of the two species (synchronous experiments) and a seed exposure following their natural seed-drop phenology (diachronic experiments). A total of 1536 acorns were experimentally distributed along a wide and natural gradient of plant cover, and removal was periodically monitored for three months at two consecutive years (with contrasting differences in seed production and thus seed availability on the ground). The probability of seed removal increased with plant cover (leaf area index, LAI) for the two oak species. Inter-specific differences in acorn removal were higher in open areas and disappeared in closed microhabitats, especially during a non-mast year. Despite later seed-drop, Q. suber acorns were removed faster and at a higher proportion than those of Q. canariensis. The higher probability of seed removal for this species could be attributed to its larger seed size compared to Q. canariensis, as inter-specific differences were less pronounced when similar sized acorns were exposed. Inter-specific differences in seed removal, arising from seed size variability and microsite heterogeneity, could be of paramount importance in oak species niche separation, driving stand dynamics and composition along environmental gradients. © 2008 The Authors.
format journal article
author Pérez-Ramos, I. M.
Urbieta, I. R.
Marañón, T.
Zavala, M. A.
Kobe, R. K.
spellingShingle Pérez-Ramos, I. M.
Urbieta, I. R.
Marañón, T.
Zavala, M. A.
Kobe, R. K.
Seed removal in two coexisting oak species Ecological consequences of seed size, plant cover and seed-drop timing
author_facet Pérez-Ramos, I. M.
Urbieta, I. R.
Marañón, T.
Zavala, M. A.
Kobe, R. K.
author_sort Pérez-Ramos, I. M.
title Seed removal in two coexisting oak species Ecological consequences of seed size, plant cover and seed-drop timing
title_short Seed removal in two coexisting oak species Ecological consequences of seed size, plant cover and seed-drop timing
title_full Seed removal in two coexisting oak species Ecological consequences of seed size, plant cover and seed-drop timing
title_fullStr Seed removal in two coexisting oak species Ecological consequences of seed size, plant cover and seed-drop timing
title_full_unstemmed Seed removal in two coexisting oak species Ecological consequences of seed size, plant cover and seed-drop timing
title_sort seed removal in two coexisting oak species ecological consequences of seed size, plant cover and seed-drop timing
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/3479
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/294353
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AT urbietair seedremovalintwocoexistingoakspeciesecologicalconsequencesofseedsizeplantcoverandseeddroptiming
AT maranont seedremovalintwocoexistingoakspeciesecologicalconsequencesofseedsizeplantcoverandseeddroptiming
AT zavalama seedremovalintwocoexistingoakspeciesecologicalconsequencesofseedsizeplantcoverandseeddroptiming
AT koberk seedremovalintwocoexistingoakspeciesecologicalconsequencesofseedsizeplantcoverandseeddroptiming
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