Eusemann Pascal, Liesebach Heike
Thuenen-Institute of Forest Genetics Großhansdorf Germany.
Ecol Evol. 2021 May 13;11(12):7796-7809. doi: 10.1002/ece3.7613. eCollection 2021 Jun.
Oaks () are major components of temperate forest ecosystems in the Northern Hemisphere where they form intermediate or climax communities. Sessile oak () forests represent the climax vegetation in eastern Germany and western Poland. Here, sessile oak forms pure stands or occurs intermixed with Scots Pine (). A large body of research is available on gene flow, reproduction dynamics, and genetic structure in fragmented landscapes and mixed populations. At the same time, our knowledge regarding large, contiguous, and monospecific populations is considerably less well developed. Our study is an attempt to further develop our understanding of the reproduction ecology of sessile oak as an ecologically and economically important forest tree by analyzing mating patterns and genetic structure within adult trees and seedlings originating from one or two reproduction events in an extensive, naturally regenerating sessile oak forest. We detected positive spatial genetic structure up to 30 meters between adult trees and up to 40 meters between seedlings. Seed dispersal distances averaged 8.4 meters. Pollen dispersal distances averaged 22.6 meters. In both cases, the largest proportion of the dispersal occurred over short distances. Dispersal over longer distances was more common for pollen but also appeared regularly for seeds. The reproductive success of individual trees was highly skewed. Only 41 percent of all adult trees produced any offspring while the majority did not participate in reproduction. Among those trees that contributed to the analyzed seedling sample, 80 percent contributed 1-3 gametes. Only 20 percent of all parent trees contributed four or more gametes. However, these relatively few most fertile trees contributed 51 percent of all gametes within the seedling sample. Vitality and growth differed significantly between reproducing and nonreproducing adult trees with reproducing trees being more vital and vigorous than nonreproducing individuals. Our study demonstrates that extensive, apparently homogenous oak forests are far from uniform on the genetic level. On the contrary, they form highly complex mosaics of remarkably small local neighborhoods. This counterbalances the levelling effect of long-distance dispersal and may increase the species' adaptive potential. Incorporating these dynamics in the management, conservation, and restoration of oak forests can support the conservation of forest genetic diversity and assist those forests in coping with environmental change.
栎树是北半球温带森林生态系统的主要组成部分,在那里它们形成中间群落或顶极群落。无梗花栎林是德国东部和波兰西部的顶极植被。在这里,无梗花栎形成纯林或与苏格兰松混生。关于破碎景观和混合种群中的基因流动、繁殖动态和遗传结构,已有大量研究。与此同时,我们对大型、连续和单种的种群的了解还相当有限。我们的研究试图通过分析来自一片广阔的自然更新的无梗花栎林一两次繁殖事件的成年树木和幼苗的交配模式及遗传结构,进一步加深我们对作为一种具有生态和经济重要性的林木的无梗花栎繁殖生态学的理解。我们检测到成年树木之间在30米范围内以及幼苗之间在40米范围内存在正空间遗传结构。种子传播距离平均为8.4米。花粉传播距离平均为22.6米。在这两种情况下,传播的最大比例都发生在短距离内。长距离传播对花粉来说更常见,但种子也经常出现长距离传播。个体树木的繁殖成功率高度不均衡。所有成年树木中只有41%产生了后代,而大多数没有参与繁殖。在那些对分析的幼苗样本有贡献的树木中,80%贡献了1 - 3个配子。所有亲本树木中只有20%贡献了四个或更多配子。然而,这些相对较少的最能育的树木贡献了幼苗样本中所有配子的51%。繁殖和不繁殖的成年树木在活力和生长方面存在显著差异,繁殖树木比不繁殖个体更具活力和生机。我们的研究表明,广阔的、表面上同质的栎树林在基因层面远非均匀一致。相反,它们形成了由非常小的局部邻域组成的高度复杂的镶嵌体。这抵消了长距离传播的均质化效应,并可能增加物种的适应潜力。将这些动态因素纳入栎树林的管理、保护和恢复中,可以支持森林遗传多样性的保护,并帮助这些森林应对环境变化。