URFM, INRAE, Avignon, France.
ECOBIOP, INRAE, St-Pée-sur-Nivelle, France.
Ann Bot. 2021 Jul 30;128(2):193-204. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcab054.
Abiotic and biotic stresses related to climate change have been associated with increased crown defoliation, decreased growth and a higher risk of mortality in many forest tree species, but the impact of stresses on tree reproduction and forest regeneration remains understudied. At the dry, warm margin of species distributions, flowering, pollination and seed maturation are expected to be affected by drought, late frost and other stresses, eventually resulting in reproduction failure. Moreover, inter-individual variation in reproductive performance versus other performance traits (growth, survival) could have important consequences for population dynamics. This study investigated the relationships among individual crown defoliation, growth and reproduction in a drought-prone population of European beech, Fagus sylvatica.
We used a spatially explicit mating model and marker-based parentage analyses to estimate effective female and male fecundities of 432 reproductive trees, which were also monitored for basal area increment and crown defoliation over 9 years.
Female and male fecundities varied markedly between individuals, more than did growth. Both female fecundity and growth decreased with increasing crown defoliation and competition, and increased with size. Moreover, the negative effect of defoliation on female fecundity was size-dependent, with a slower decline in female fecundity with increasing defoliation for the large individuals. Finally, a trade-off between growth and female fecundity was observed in response to defoliation: some large trees maintained significant female fecundity at the expense of reduced growth in response to defoliation, while some other defoliated trees maintained high growth at the expense of reduced female fecundity.
Our results suggest that, while decreasing their growth, some large defoliated trees still contribute to reproduction through seed production and pollination. This non-coordinated decline of growth and fecundity at individual level in response to stress may compromise the evolution of stress-resistance traits at population level, and increase forest tree vulnerability.
与气候变化相关的非生物和生物胁迫已被认为会导致许多森林树种的树冠凋落增加、生长减缓以及死亡率升高,但胁迫对树木繁殖和森林更新的影响仍研究不足。在物种分布的干旱温暖边缘,开花、授粉和种子成熟预计会受到干旱、晚霜和其他胁迫的影响,最终导致繁殖失败。此外,个体在繁殖表现与其他表现特征(生长、存活)之间的差异可能会对种群动态产生重要影响。本研究调查了易受干旱影响的欧洲山毛榉(Fagus sylvatica)种群中个体树冠凋落、生长和繁殖之间的关系。
我们使用空间显式交配模型和基于标记的亲代分析来估计 432 株有繁殖能力的树木的有效雌性和雄性繁殖力,这些树木还在 9 年内监测了基面积增量和树冠凋落情况。
个体之间的雌性和雄性繁殖力差异显著,比生长差异更大。雌性繁殖力和生长均随树冠凋落和竞争的增加而降低,随个体大小的增加而增加。此外,凋落对雌性繁殖力的负面影响取决于个体大小,随着凋落量的增加,大型个体的雌性繁殖力下降速度较慢。最后,在应对凋落时,观察到生长和雌性繁殖力之间存在权衡:一些大型树木在凋落的情况下,通过种子生产和授粉来维持大量的雌性繁殖力,而其他一些凋落的树木则通过降低雌性繁殖力来维持较高的生长速度。
我们的结果表明,一些大型凋落树木在降低生长的同时,仍通过种子生产和授粉来促进繁殖。个体对胁迫的非协调性生长和繁殖力下降可能会损害种群水平上的抗胁迫性状的进化,并增加森林树木的脆弱性。