Sousa Wayne P, Kennedy Peter G, Mitchell Betsy J
Department of Integrative Biology, 3060 VLSB, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
Oecologia. 2003 May;135(4):564-75. doi: 10.1007/s00442-003-1237-0. Epub 2003 Apr 9.
Variation in rates of seedling recruitment, growth, and survival can strongly influence the rate and course of forest regeneration following disturbance. Using a combination of field sampling and shadehouse experiments, we investigated the influence of propagule size and predispersal insect damage on the establishment and early growth of the three common mangrove species on the Caribbean coast of Panama: Avicennia germinans, Laguncularia racemosa, and Rhizophora mangle. In our field samples, all three species exhibited considerable intraspecific variation in mature propagule size, and suffered moderate to high levels of predispersal attack by larval insects. Rates of insect attack were largely independent of propagule size both within and among trees. Our experimental studies using undamaged mature propagules showed that, for all three species, seedlings established at high rates regardless of propagule size. However, propagule size did have a marked effect on early seedling growth: seedlings that developed from larger propagules grew more rapidly. Predispersal insect infestations that had destroyed or removed a substantial amount of tissue, particularly if that tissue was meristematic or conductive, reduced the establishment of propagules of all three species. The effect of sublethal tissue damage or loss on the subsequent growth of established seedlings varied among the three mangrove species. For Avicennia, the growth response was graded: for a propagule of a given size, the more tissue lost, the slower the growth of the seedling. For Laguncularia, the response to insect attack appeared to be all-or-none. If the boring insect penetrated the outer spongy seed coat and reached the developing embryo, it usually caused sufficient damage to prevent a seedling from developing. On the other hand, if the insect damaged but did not penetrate the seed coat, a completely healthy seedling developed and its growth rate was indistinguishable from a seedling developing from an undamaged propagule of the same size. Similar to Avicennia, if an infestation did not completely girdle a Rhizophora seedling, it survived, but grew at a reduced rate. In summary, our experiments demonstrated that natural levels of variation in propagule size and predispersal damage by insects translate into significant differences in seedling performance in terms of establishment and/or early growth. Such differences are sufficiently large that they could influence the intensity and outcome of competitive interactions during forest regeneration.
幼苗补充、生长和存活速率的变化会强烈影响干扰后森林更新的速率和进程。通过结合野外采样和温室实验,我们研究了繁殖体大小和传播前昆虫损害对巴拿马加勒比海岸三种常见红树林物种(黑果榄仁、拉贡木和红树)的定植和早期生长的影响。在我们的野外样本中,所有这三个物种在成熟繁殖体大小上都表现出相当大的种内变异,并且遭受了幼虫昆虫中等至高水平的传播前攻击。树木内部和树木之间,昆虫攻击的发生率在很大程度上与繁殖体大小无关。我们使用未受损成熟繁殖体的实验研究表明,对于所有这三个物种,无论繁殖体大小如何,幼苗的定植率都很高。然而,繁殖体大小确实对幼苗的早期生长有显著影响:从较大繁殖体发育而来的幼苗生长得更快。传播前的昆虫侵害如果破坏或去除了大量组织,特别是如果该组织是分生组织或传导组织,则会降低所有这三个物种繁殖体的定植率。亚致死组织损伤或损失对已定植幼苗后续生长的影响在这三种红树林物种中各不相同。对于黑果榄仁,生长反应是分级的:对于给定大小的繁殖体,损失的组织越多,幼苗的生长就越慢。对于拉贡木,对昆虫攻击的反应似乎是全有或全无的。如果蛀虫穿透外部海绵状种皮并到达发育中的胚,通常会造成足够的损害以阻止幼苗发育。另一方面,如果昆虫损害但未穿透种皮,则会发育出完全健康的幼苗,其生长速率与从相同大小的未受损繁殖体发育而来的幼苗无法区分。与黑果榄仁类似,如果侵害没有完全环绕红树幼苗,它会存活下来,但生长速率会降低。总之,我们的实验表明,繁殖体大小和昆虫传播前损害的自然变异水平在定植和/或早期生长方面转化为幼苗表现的显著差异。这些差异足够大,以至于它们可能会影响森林更新期间竞争相互作用的强度和结果。