Alien seedling recruitment as a response to altitude and soil disturbance in the mountain grasslands of central Argentina

被引:0
|
作者
Valeria Paiaro
Arnaldo Mangeaud
Eduardo Pucheta
机构
[1] CONICET-Universidad Nacional de Córdoba,Cátedra de Biogeografía and Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biología Vegetal (IMBIV)
[2] Universidad Nacional de Córdoba,Cátedra de Estadística y Biometría and Instituto de Investigaciones Entomológicas
[3] Universidad Nacional de San Juan,Departamento de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales
来源
Plant Ecology | 2007年 / 193卷
关键词
Alien species; Altitudinal gradient; Micro-site disturbance; Plant invasion;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Climate and disturbance are considered key factors in explaining plant invasion, mainly by their effect on alien seedling recruitment. We tested whether soil disturbance by digging and altitude, as a sub-set of climate, affected the seedling recruitment of two alien species (Cirsium vulgare and Melilotus alba) in the mountain grasslands of central Argentina. We performed a seed-addition factorial experiment with altitude as a fixed factor co-variable (6 levels), time since sowing (6 levels) as an autoregressive co-variable, and soil disturbance by digging (two levels) and seed addition (two levels) as fixed factors. Seeds of the studied species were sown in replicated undisturbed and disturbed soil plots, in grassland stands located every 200 m from 1200 to 2200 m a.s.l. The number of emerging seedlings at each plot was recorded during a period of 8 months, at intervals of 30–60 days. Seedlings of both alien species emerged at all the studied altitudes, but only the recruitment of C. vulgare increased linearly with altitude. Moreover, the time window of seedling recruitment for this species increased with altitude. Soil disturbance produced a significant decrease in overall seedling emergence of both species; however, an increase in emergence was observed for C. vulgare at an altitude over 2000 m a.s.l. Natural emergence inside control plots without seed addition was only observed for Cirsium vulgare, which indicates that this species was not seed limited. Our results show that altitude and the absence of disturbance do not restrict the recruitment of C. vulgare and M. alba in these natural mountain grasslands. Moreover, these alien species seem to be tolerant to and even favoured by conditions occurring at higher altitudes and in absence of micro-site soil disturbances in the Córdoba mountain grasslands.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:279 / 291
页数:12
相关论文
共 49 条
  • [31] Soil conservation in Polylepis mountain forests of Central Argentina: Is livestock reducing our natural capital?
    Renison, Daniel
    Hensen, Isabell
    Suarez, Ricardo
    Cingolani, Ana M.
    Marcora, Paula
    Giorgis, Melisa A.
    AUSTRAL ECOLOGY, 2010, 35 (04) : 435 - 443
  • [32] Anthropogenic soil degradation affects seed viability in Polylepis australis mountain forests of central Argentina
    Renison, D
    Hensen, I
    Cingolani, AM
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2004, 196 (2-3) : 327 - 333
  • [33] Seed rain, soil seed bank, seedling recruitment, and survival of seedlings on a glacier foreland in the Central Alps
    Erschbamer, B
    Kneringer, E
    Schlag, RN
    FLORA, 2001, 196 (04) : 304 - 312
  • [34] Biogeographical relationships and new regionalisation of high-altitude grasslands and woodlands of the central Pampean Ranges (Argentina), based on vascular plants and vertebrates
    Martinez, Gonzalo A.
    Daniel Arana, Marcelo
    Oggero, Antonia J.
    Natale, Evangelina S.
    AUSTRALIAN SYSTEMATIC BOTANY, 2017, 29 (06) : 473 - 488
  • [35] Changing Perceptions and Actions in Response to Forest Disturbance by Mountain Pine Beetles in North Central Colorado
    Qin, Hua
    Brenkert-Smith, Hannah
    Vickery, Jamie
    Sanders, Christine
    Flint, Courtney G.
    JOURNAL OF FORESTRY, 2021, 119 (05) : 493 - 505
  • [36] The restoration of degraded mountain woodlands:: Effects of seed provenance and microsite characteristics on Polylepis australis seedling survival and growth in Central Argentina
    Renison, D
    Cingolani, AM
    Suarez, R
    Menoyo, E
    Coutsiers, C
    Sobral, A
    Hensen, I
    RESTORATION ECOLOGY, 2005, 13 (01) : 129 - 137
  • [37] Canopy structure and below-canopy temperatures interact to shape seedling response to disturbance in a Rocky Mountain subalpine forest
    Carlson, Amanda R.
    Sibold, Jason S.
    Negron, Jose F.
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2020, 472
  • [38] Soil infiltration mechanisms under plant root disturbance in arid and semi-arid grasslands and the response of solute transport in rhizosphere soil
    Jia, Yuanyuan
    Huan, Huan
    Zhang, Wenjing
    Wan, Bo
    Sun, Jiaming
    Tu, Zhipeng
    Science of the Total Environment, 2024, 957
  • [39] Response of ants to grazing disturbance at the central Monte Desert of Argentina: community descriptors and functional group scheme
    Silvia CLAVER
    Susana L SILNIK
    Florencia F CAMPóN
    Journal of Arid Land, 2014, 6 (01) : 117 - 127
  • [40] Response of ants to grazing disturbance at the central Monte Desert of Argentina: community descriptors and functional group scheme
    Silvia CLAVER
    Susana L SILNIK
    Florencia F CAMPóN
    Journal of Arid Land, 2014, (01) : 117 - 127