Yi Xianfeng, Curtis Rachel, Bartlow Andrew W, Agosta Salvatore J, Steele Michael A
College of Agriculture, Henan University of Science and Technology, Luoyang, 471003, China.
Naturwissenschaften. 2013 Jan;100(1):81-90. doi: 10.1007/s00114-012-0996-z. Epub 2012 Nov 24.
Acorns of many white oak species germinate soon after autumn seed fall, a characteristic widely interpreted as a general adaptation to escape predation by small rodents. However, the mechanism by which early, rapid germination allows escape and/or tolerance of seed damage remains unclear. Here we reported how specific germination traits of chestnut oak (Quercus montana) acorns, and those of other white oak species, allow successful escape from acorn pruning by rodents. During germination, chestnut oak acorns develop elongated cotyledonary petioles, which extend beyond the distal end of the acorn (1-2 cm) to the point at which the epicotyl and radicle diverge. However, granivorous rodents often prune the taproots above or below the plumule when eating or caching these germinated acorns in autumn. Hence, we hypothesized elongation of cotyledonary petioles allows chestnut oaks to escape acorn pruning by rodents. We simulated pruning by rodents by cutting the taproot at different stages of germination (radicle length) to evaluate the regeneration capacity of four resulting seedling remnants following taproot pruning: acorns with the plumule (remnant I), acorns without the plumule (remnant II), and pruned taproots with (remnant III) or without the plumule (remnant IV). Our results showed that remnant I germinated into seedlings regardless of the length of the taproot previously pruned and removed. Remnant III successfully germinated and survived provided that taproots were ≥6 cm in length, whereas remnant IV was unable to produce seedlings. Remnant II only developed adventitious roots near the severed ends of the cotyledonary petioles. Field experiments also showed that pruned taproots with the plumule successfully regenerated into seedlings. We suggest that the elongated cotyledonary petioles, typical of most white oak species in North America, represent a key adaptation that allows frequent escape from rodent damage and predation. The ability of pruned taproots to produce seedlings suggests a far greater resilience of white oaks to seed predation than previously anticipated.
许多白栎树种的橡子在秋季种子落地后不久就会发芽,这一特性被广泛解读为一种普遍的适应性特征,以避免被小型啮齿动物捕食。然而,早期快速发芽能够避免和/或耐受种子损伤的机制仍不清楚。在此,我们报告了栗栎(Quercus montana)橡子以及其他白栎树种的特定发芽特性是如何使它们成功避免被啮齿动物啃食橡子的。在发芽过程中,栗栎橡子会长出细长的子叶柄,这些子叶柄会延伸到橡子远端之外(1 - 2厘米),直到上胚轴和胚根分叉处。然而,食谷啮齿动物在秋季啃食或贮藏这些发芽的橡子时,常常会在上胚轴上方或下方修剪主根。因此,我们推测子叶柄的伸长使栗栎能够避免被啮齿动物啃食橡子。我们通过在发芽的不同阶段(胚根长度)切断主根来模拟啮齿动物的修剪行为,以评估主根修剪后四种幼苗残体的再生能力:带有上胚轴的橡子(残体I)、没有上胚轴的橡子(残体II)、带有上胚轴的修剪后的主根(残体III)以及没有上胚轴的修剪后的主根(残体IV)。我们的结果表明,无论之前修剪和去除的主根长度如何,残体I都能发芽长成幼苗。只要主根长度≥6厘米,残体III就能成功发芽并存活,而残体IV无法长出幼苗。残体II仅在子叶柄切断端附近长出不定根。田间试验还表明,带有上胚轴的修剪后的主根能成功再生为幼苗。我们认为,北美大多数白栎树种典型的细长子叶柄是一种关键的适应性特征,它使白栎能够经常避免被啮齿动物破坏和捕食。修剪后的主根能够长出幼苗的能力表明,白栎对种子捕食的恢复力比之前预期的要强得多。