Augspurger Carol K, Franson Susan E, Cushman Katherine C, Muller-Landau Helene C
Department of Plant Biology University of Illinois Urbana Illinois 61801.
EPA 26 W. Martin Luther King Jr. Drive Cincinnati Ohio 45268.
Ecol Evol. 2016 Jan 25;6(4):1128-42. doi: 10.1002/ece3.1905. eCollection 2016 Feb.
The distribution of wind-dispersed seeds around a parent tree depends on diaspore and tree traits, as well as wind conditions and surrounding vegetation. This study of a neotropical canopy tree, Platypodium elegans, explored the extent to which parental variation in diaspore and tree traits explained (1) rate of diaspore descent in still air, (2) distributions of diaspores dispersed from a 40-m tower in the forest, and (3) natural diaspore distributions around the parent tree. The geometric mean rate of descent in still air among 20 parents was highly correlated with geometric mean wing loading(1/2) (r = 0.84). However, diaspore traits and rate of descent predicted less variation in dispersal distance from the tower, although descent rate(-1) consistently correlated with dispersal distance. Measured seed shadows, particularly their distribution edges, differed significantly among six parents (DBH range 62-181 cm) and were best fit by six separate anisotropic dispersal kernels and surveyed fecundities. Measured rate of descent and tree traits, combined in a mechanistic seed dispersal model, did not significantly explain variation among parents in natural seed dispersal distances, perhaps due to the limited power to detect effects with only six trees. Seedling and sapling distributions were at a greater mean distance from the parents than seed distributions; saplings were heavily concentrated at far distances. Variation among parents in the distribution tails so critical for recruitment could not be explained by measured diaspore or tree traits with this sample size, and may be determined more by wind patterns and the timing of abscission in relation to wind conditions. Studies of wind dispersal need to devote greater field efforts at recording the "rare" dispersal events that contribute to far dispersal distances, following their consequences, and in understanding the mechanisms that generate them.
风媒传播种子在母树周围的分布取决于果实和树木的特征,以及风况和周围植被。这项对新热带地区冠层树木雅致扁荚豆(Platypodium elegans)的研究,探讨了果实和树木特征的亲本变异在多大程度上解释了:(1)静止空气中果实的下降速率;(2)从森林中一座40米高的塔上散落的果实分布;(3)母树周围果实的自然分布。20个亲本在静止空气中的几何平均下降速率与几何平均翼载荷(1/2)高度相关(r = 0.84)。然而,果实特征和下降速率对离塔扩散距离变异的预测能力较弱,尽管下降速率(-1)始终与扩散距离相关。在6个亲本(胸径范围62 - 181厘米)中测量的种子阴影,特别是它们的分布边缘,差异显著,并且由6个单独的各向异性扩散核和调查的繁殖力拟合效果最佳。在一个机械种子扩散模型中结合测量的下降速率和树木特征,并没有显著解释亲本在自然种子扩散距离上的变异,这可能是由于仅用6棵树检测效应的能力有限。幼苗和幼树的分布比种子分布离亲本的平均距离更远;幼树大量集中在远距离处。对于补充更新至关重要的亲本在分布尾部的变异,用这个样本量的测量果实或树木特征无法解释,可能更多地由风型以及与风况相关的脱落时间决定。风媒传播研究需要投入更多的野外工作,记录有助于远距离扩散的“罕见”扩散事件,追踪其后果,并理解产生这些事件的机制。