Biology Department, Syracuse University, 107 College Place, Syracuse, NY 13244, USA.
Tree Physiol. 2020 Jun 30;40(7):969-979. doi: 10.1093/treephys/tpaa042.
Many non-native, invasive woody species in mesic forests of North America are both shade tolerant and more productive than their native counterparts, but their ability to tolerate disturbances remains unclear. In particular, complete defoliation associated with herbivory and extreme weather events may have larger impacts on invaders if natives maintain greater resource reserves to support regrowth. On the other hand, invaders may be more resilient to partial defoliation by means of upregulation of photosynthesis or may be better able to take advantage of canopy gaps to support refoliation. Across a light gradient, we measured radial growth, new leaf production, non-structural carbohydrates (NSCs), chlorophyll content and survival in response to varying levels of defoliation in saplings of two native and two invasive species that commonly co-occur in deciduous forests of Eastern North America. Individuals were subjected to one of the four leaf removal treatments: no-defoliation controls, 50% defoliation over three growing seasons, 100% defoliation over one growing season and 100% defoliation over two growing seasons. Contrary to our hypothesis, native and invasive species generally did not differ in defoliation responses, although invasive species experienced more pronounced decreases in leaf chlorophyll following full defoliation and native species' survival was more dependent on light availability. Radial growth progressively decreased with increasing defoliation intensity, and refoliation mass was largely a function of sapling size. Survival rates for half-defoliated saplings did not differ from controls (90% of saplings survived), but survival rates in fully defoliated individuals over one and two growing seasons were reduced to 45 and 15%, respectively. Surviving defoliated saplings generally maintained control NSC concentrations. Under high light, chlorophyll concentrations were higher in half-defoliated saplings compared with controls, which may suggest photosynthetic upregulation. Our results indicate that native and invasive species respond similarly to defoliation, despite the generally faster growth strategy of invaders.
许多北美湿润森林中的非本地、入侵性木本物种既具有耐荫性,又比本地物种具有更高的生产力,但它们对干扰的耐受能力仍不清楚。特别是与食草和极端天气事件相关的完全落叶可能会对入侵物种产生更大的影响,如果本地物种保留更多的资源储备来支持再生。另一方面,入侵物种可能通过光合作用的上调来更好地耐受部分落叶,或者可能更有能力利用林冠空隙来支持再生长。在光照梯度上,我们测量了两个本地物种和两个常见于北美的落叶林中的入侵物种的幼苗对不同程度的落叶处理的径向生长、新叶产生、非结构性碳水化合物 (NSC)、叶绿素含量和存活率的反应。个体接受了四种去叶处理之一:无去叶对照、三个生长季节 50%去叶、一个生长季节 100%去叶和两个生长季节 100%去叶。与我们的假设相反,本地和入侵物种通常在去叶反应上没有差异,尽管在完全去叶后,入侵物种的叶片叶绿素减少更为明显,而本地物种的存活率更依赖于光照。随着去叶强度的增加,径向生长逐渐减少,再生长量主要取决于幼苗大小。半去叶幼苗的存活率与对照没有差异(90%的幼苗存活),但在一个和两个生长季节完全去叶的个体的存活率分别降低到 45%和 15%。幸存的去叶幼苗通常保持对照 NSC 浓度。在高光下,半去叶幼苗的叶绿素浓度高于对照,这可能表明光合作用的上调。我们的结果表明,尽管入侵物种通常具有更快的生长策略,但本地和入侵物种对去叶的反应相似。