LaMontagne Jalene M, Greene David F, Holland E Penelope, Johnstone Jill F, Schulze Mark, Zimmerman Jess K, Lyon Nicholas J, Chen Angel, Miller Tom E X, Nigro Katherine M, Snell Rebecca S, Barton Jessica H, Chaudhary V Bala, Cleavitt Natalie L, Crone Elizabeth E, Koenig Walter D, Macias Diana, Pearse Ian S, Redmond Miranda D
Department of Biology, University of Missouri - St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, United States.
Whitney R. Harris World Ecology Center, University of Missouri - St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, United States.
Ecol Lett. 2024 Dec;27(12):e14498. doi: 10.1111/ele.14498.
Mast seeding, the synchronous and highly variable production of seed crops by perennial plants, is a population-level phenomenon and has cascading effects in ecosystems. Mast seeding studies are typically conducted at the population/species level. Much less is known about synchrony in mast seeding between species because the necessary long-term data are rarely available. To investigate synchrony between species within communities, we used long-term data from seven forest communities in the U.S. Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) network, ranging from tropical rainforest to boreal forest. We focus on cross-species synchrony and (i) quantify synchrony in reproduction overall and within LTER sites, (ii) test for relationships between synchrony with trait and phylogenetic similarity and (iii) investigate how climate conditions at sites are related to levels of synchrony. Overall, reproductive synchrony between woody plant species was greater than expected by chance, but spanned a wide range of values between species. Based on 11 functional and reproductive traits for 103 species (plus phylogenetic relatedness), cross-species synchrony in reproduction was driven primarily by trait similarity with phylogeny being largely unimportant, and synchrony was higher in sites with greater climatic water deficit. Community-level synchrony in masting has consequences for understanding forest regeneration dynamics and consumer-resource interactions.
大年结实,即多年生植物种子作物的同步且高度可变的产量,是一种种群水平的现象,并且在生态系统中具有连锁效应。大年结实研究通常在种群/物种水平上进行。关于物种间大年结实同步性的了解要少得多,因为必要的长期数据很少可得。为了研究群落内物种间的同步性,我们使用了来自美国长期生态研究(LTER)网络中七个森林群落的长期数据,范围从热带雨林到北方森林。我们关注跨物种同步性,并(i)量化总体以及在LTER站点内繁殖的同步性,(ii)测试同步性与性状和系统发育相似性之间的关系,以及(iii)研究站点的气候条件如何与同步性水平相关。总体而言,木本植物物种间的繁殖同步性大于偶然预期,但物种间的值跨度很大。基于103个物种的11个功能和繁殖性状(加上系统发育相关性),繁殖中的跨物种同步性主要由性状相似性驱动,系统发育在很大程度上并不重要,并且在气候水分亏缺较大的站点同步性更高。群落水平的大年结实同步性对于理解森林更新动态和消费者 - 资源相互作用具有重要意义。