Davis Mark A, Villinski Jeff, McAndrew Sarah, Scholtz Heidi, Young Elisabeth
Department of Biology, Macalester College, 55105, Saint Paul, MN, USA.
Oecologia. 1991 Mar;86(1):113-118. doi: 10.1007/BF00317397.
The effects of fire and pocket gophers, Geomys bursarius, on the survivorship of Penstemon grandiflorus growing in an oak woodland in Minnesota were studied from 1986 to 1990. Plants growing in sparse vegetation experienced mortality rates twice that of plants growing in dense vegetation. This difference was due partly to pocket gophers whose earth moving activities reduce the density of vegetation and bury and kill individual Penstemon plants. Laboratory feeding trials showed that gophers readily eat Penstemon, particularly the fleshy roots. An experiment involving the removal of 25-75% of the root tissue in 90 plants showed that root loss significantly reduced survivorship, suggesting that gopher herbivory might also kill plants. When gophers were experimentally excluded, plants growing in sparse vegetation exhibited significantly lower mortality rates than those growing in dense vegetation. Plants in the smallest size class exhibited reduced survivorship following a late spring burn; however, overall patterns of survivorship of plants in burned areas did not differ markedly from those in the unburned areas. A longitudenal analysis of plants with different reproductive histories revealed no survivorship cost to reproduction. Mortality rates decreased with increasing plant size. Small plants were more likely to be killed by fire and by being buried under gopher mounds. Differences in underground energy reserves of small and large plants can account for most of the survivorship patterns observed in this study. The study shows that within openings of the oak woodland, fire and gophers reduce the survival of individual Penstemon plants. Nevertheless, since both gophers and fire also serve to perpetuate suitable habitat in the woodland, Penstemon is ultimately dependent on both for its long term persistence in the landscape.
1986年至1990年期间,研究了火灾和囊鼠(Geomys bursarius)对生长在明尼苏达州橡树林地中的大花钓钟柳(Penstemon grandiflorus)存活情况的影响。生长在稀疏植被中的植物死亡率是生长在茂密植被中植物的两倍。这种差异部分归因于囊鼠,其挖掘活动降低了植被密度,并掩埋和杀死了个别大花钓钟柳植株。实验室喂养试验表明,囊鼠很容易吃大花钓钟柳,尤其是肉质根。一项涉及去除90株植物25%-75%根组织的实验表明,根系损失显著降低了存活率,这表明囊鼠的食草行为也可能杀死植物。当通过实验排除囊鼠时,生长在稀疏植被中的植物死亡率显著低于生长在茂密植被中的植物。最小尺寸等级的植物在春末火灾后存活率降低;然而,燃烧区域植物的总体存活模式与未燃烧区域的植物没有明显差异。对具有不同繁殖历史的植物进行的纵向分析显示,繁殖没有生存成本。死亡率随着植物尺寸的增加而降低。小植株更容易被火烧死以及被埋在囊鼠土堆下。大小植株地下能量储备的差异可以解释本研究中观察到的大部分存活模式。该研究表明,在橡树林地的开阔区域内,火灾和囊鼠会降低大花钓钟柳个体的存活率。然而,由于囊鼠和火灾也有助于维持林地中适宜的栖息地,大花钓钟柳最终在景观中的长期存续依赖于两者。