Botany, School of Environmental and Rural Science, University of New England, Armidale, NSW, 2351, Australia.
Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, NT, 0909, Australia.
New Phytol. 2013 Jan;197(1):19-35. doi: 10.1111/nph.12001. Epub 2012 Oct 30.
Resprouting as a response to disturbance is now widely recognized as a key functional trait among woody plants and as the basis for the persistence niche. However, the underlying mechanisms that define resprouting responses to disturbance are poorly conceptualized. Resprouting ability is constrained by the interaction of the disturbance regime that depletes the buds and resources needed to fund resprouting, and the environment that drives growth and resource allocation. We develop a buds-protection-resources (BPR) framework for understanding resprouting in fire-prone ecosystems, based on bud bank location, bud protection, and how buds are resourced. Using this framework we go beyond earlier emphases on basal resprouting and highlight the importance of apical, epicormic and below-ground resprouting to the persistence niche. The BPR framework provides insights into: resprouting typologies that include both fire resisters (i.e. survive fire but do not resprout) and fire resprouters; the methods by which buds escape fire effects, such as thick bark; and the predictability of community assembly of resprouting types in relation to site productivity, disturbance regime and competition. Furthermore, predicting the consequences of global change is enhanced by the BPR framework because it potentially forecasts the retention or loss of above-ground biomass.
再生是对干扰的一种响应,现已被广泛认为是木本植物的一个关键功能特征,也是持续存在的基础。然而,定义对干扰的再生响应的潜在机制还没有被很好地理解。再生能力受到干扰模式的影响,这种模式会消耗芽和用于支持再生的资源,同时还受到驱动生长和资源分配的环境的影响。我们基于芽库位置、芽的保护以及芽的资源供应方式,提出了一个用于理解易发生火灾的生态系统中再生的芽保护资源(BPR)框架。利用这个框架,我们超越了早期对基生再生的强调,强调了顶芽、侧芽和地下再生对持续存在的重要性。BPR 框架提供了以下方面的深入了解:包括防火(即能经受火灾但不进行再生)和火响应(即能经受火灾并进行再生)在内的再生类型;芽逃脱火灾影响的方法,例如厚树皮;以及与站点生产力、干扰模式和竞争有关的再生类型群落组装的可预测性。此外,BPR 框架增强了对全球变化后果的预测能力,因为它有可能预测地上生物量的保留或丧失。