Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10662/20239
Títulos: Facilitation of holm oak recruitment through two contrasted shrubs species in Mediterranean grazed woodlands
Autores/as: Rolo Romero, Víctor
Plieninger, Tobias
Moreno Marcos, Gerardo
Palabras clave: Matorralización;Shrub encroachment;Efecto nodriza;Nurse Plant;Dehesa
Fecha de publicación: 2013
Editor/a: Wiley
Resumen: Question: Regeneration failure and gradual tree dieback are major threats for the persistence of savanna-like grazed oak woodlands. Current research has argued that the scarcity of “safe sites”, in particular shrubs, is the main cause of the lack of effective tree recruitment. But can different shrub species be considered as safe sites generally? Do two distinct shrub species, with contrasted life strategies, affect several life stages of tree regeneration in similar ways or do they specifically influence the recruitment process? Location: Holm oak woodlands of SW Iberian Peninsula (40° 02’N; 06°06’W) Methods: We surveyed densities of recently emerged and survived seedlings as well as small and large saplings during two consecutive years in 40 sites that were independently managed comparing plots encroached by either Cistus ladanifer (a shallow-rooted shrub with reported allelopathic compounds that forms thick populations) or Retama sphaerocarpa (a N2-fixing deep-rooted shrub that forms scattered populations) versus their respective control plots (without shrubs). To assess the effect of mature trees and both shrub species on the performance and survival of recently emerged oak seedlings, we established an acorn sowing experiment in the same surveyed microhabitats (open spaces, shrub, tree and tree-shrub). Results: The survey showed that both shrubs species had a positive effect at early recruitment stages. At later life stages, this effect weakened under Cistus whereas it strengthened under Retama. The acorn sowing experiment showed that both shrub species buffered abiotic conditions and enhanced seedling functioning similarly, but Retama enhanced seedling survival to a higher extent than Cistus. Conclusions: The two shrub species impose a specific template that is able to affect the long-term dynamics of Mediterranean oak woodlands. Cistus shrubs are effective to protect seedlings physically against herbivores and facilitate early survival, but may compete with older stages of oak regeneration. By contrast, Retama shrubs exert a stronger biological facilitation and guarantee log-term persistence of surviving seedlings. We argue that improved understanding of the effectiveness of different nurse plants and their contrasting factors is of major interest for the conservation and restoration of degraded oak woodlands.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10662/20239
DOI: 10.1111/j.1654-1103.2012.01458.x
Colección:DBVET - Artículos

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