Aspects of the population biology, life history and threats to Aloe ortholopha Christian and Milne-Redh.: A serpentine endemic from the northern Great Dyke of Zimbabwe

Background: Aloe ortholopha is a rare endemic confined to serpentine soils of the Great Dyke of Zimbabwe. Its International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) status is listed as Vulnerable; however, its population biology and life history are poorly documented. Objectives: The aim of this art...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ngoni I. Kunonga, Tamuka Nhiwatiwa, Mduduzi Tembani, Shakkie Kativu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: South African National Biodiversity Institut 2019-02-01
Series:Bothalia: African Biodiversity & Conservation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.abcjournal.aosis.co.za/index.php/abc/article/view/2396
id doaj-0d18fca869a44344ab86ce08022d43ff
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0d18fca869a44344ab86ce08022d43ff2020-11-25T02:02:38ZengSouth African National Biodiversity InstitutBothalia: African Biodiversity & Conservation0006-82412311-92842019-02-01491e1e810.4102/abc.v49i1.23961963Aspects of the population biology, life history and threats to Aloe ortholopha Christian and Milne-Redh.: A serpentine endemic from the northern Great Dyke of ZimbabweNgoni I. Kunonga0Tamuka Nhiwatiwa1Mduduzi Tembani2Shakkie Kativu3Department of Biological Sciences, University of ZimbabweDepartment of Biological Sciences, University of ZimbabweForest Research Centre, HarareDepartment of Biological Sciences, University of ZimbabweBackground: Aloe ortholopha is a rare endemic confined to serpentine soils of the Great Dyke of Zimbabwe. Its International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) status is listed as Vulnerable; however, its population biology and life history are poorly documented. Objectives: The aim of this article is to provide information on the population biology and life history of A. ortholopha through assessment of its size-class distribution, population size and density, reproductive output and fitness, and threats related to fire and mining. Method: Circumference of A. ortholopha leaf rosette was used to ascertain size-class distribution. Population size and density were determined by enumerating flowering individuals. Per-capita reproductive output was determined as mean number of flowers per plant, fruit set and mean number of seeds per fruit. Fitness was determined from seed germination capacity. Impact of fire and mining were recorded photographically. Results: Determination of size-class distribution of A. ortholopha from three study sites (southern region [SR], central region [CR] and northern region [NR]) revealed a bell-shaped curve dominated by intermediate size classes. Population size (number of flowering individuals) ranged from 36 to 66 per site. This translated to a density of 4.0–7.3 flowering plants per hectare. Per-capita reproductive output, measured as mean number of flowers per plant, was significantly different in SR and CR compared to that in the NR region. Mean number of fruits per plant did not significantly differ across the three regions. Mean seed set per plant in CR and NR was significantly different to that in the SR region. Species fitness, as determined from in vitro germination assays, showed that seeds harvested from fire-damaged capsules have the lowest cumulative germination percentage. It was also observed that leaf rosettes curled up to form a ball that protects the apical centre of plants from fire damage. Conclusion: A. ortholopha occurs in small population clusters of low density. The species has a low per-capita reproductive output characterised by production of many flowers, but with very low percentage fruit and seed set. The species has low fitness as evidenced by nominal recruitment of saplings and juveniles. Conspecific mates are frequently lost owing to fire and mining activities.https://journals.abcjournal.aosis.co.za/index.php/abc/article/view/2396aloe ortholopha, great dyke, serpentine, population size structure, germination, reproductive output
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ngoni I. Kunonga
Tamuka Nhiwatiwa
Mduduzi Tembani
Shakkie Kativu
spellingShingle Ngoni I. Kunonga
Tamuka Nhiwatiwa
Mduduzi Tembani
Shakkie Kativu
Aspects of the population biology, life history and threats to Aloe ortholopha Christian and Milne-Redh.: A serpentine endemic from the northern Great Dyke of Zimbabwe
Bothalia: African Biodiversity & Conservation
aloe ortholopha, great dyke, serpentine, population size structure, germination, reproductive output
author_facet Ngoni I. Kunonga
Tamuka Nhiwatiwa
Mduduzi Tembani
Shakkie Kativu
author_sort Ngoni I. Kunonga
title Aspects of the population biology, life history and threats to Aloe ortholopha Christian and Milne-Redh.: A serpentine endemic from the northern Great Dyke of Zimbabwe
title_short Aspects of the population biology, life history and threats to Aloe ortholopha Christian and Milne-Redh.: A serpentine endemic from the northern Great Dyke of Zimbabwe
title_full Aspects of the population biology, life history and threats to Aloe ortholopha Christian and Milne-Redh.: A serpentine endemic from the northern Great Dyke of Zimbabwe
title_fullStr Aspects of the population biology, life history and threats to Aloe ortholopha Christian and Milne-Redh.: A serpentine endemic from the northern Great Dyke of Zimbabwe
title_full_unstemmed Aspects of the population biology, life history and threats to Aloe ortholopha Christian and Milne-Redh.: A serpentine endemic from the northern Great Dyke of Zimbabwe
title_sort aspects of the population biology, life history and threats to aloe ortholopha christian and milne-redh.: a serpentine endemic from the northern great dyke of zimbabwe
publisher South African National Biodiversity Institut
series Bothalia: African Biodiversity & Conservation
issn 0006-8241
2311-9284
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Background: Aloe ortholopha is a rare endemic confined to serpentine soils of the Great Dyke of Zimbabwe. Its International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) status is listed as Vulnerable; however, its population biology and life history are poorly documented. Objectives: The aim of this article is to provide information on the population biology and life history of A. ortholopha through assessment of its size-class distribution, population size and density, reproductive output and fitness, and threats related to fire and mining. Method: Circumference of A. ortholopha leaf rosette was used to ascertain size-class distribution. Population size and density were determined by enumerating flowering individuals. Per-capita reproductive output was determined as mean number of flowers per plant, fruit set and mean number of seeds per fruit. Fitness was determined from seed germination capacity. Impact of fire and mining were recorded photographically. Results: Determination of size-class distribution of A. ortholopha from three study sites (southern region [SR], central region [CR] and northern region [NR]) revealed a bell-shaped curve dominated by intermediate size classes. Population size (number of flowering individuals) ranged from 36 to 66 per site. This translated to a density of 4.0–7.3 flowering plants per hectare. Per-capita reproductive output, measured as mean number of flowers per plant, was significantly different in SR and CR compared to that in the NR region. Mean number of fruits per plant did not significantly differ across the three regions. Mean seed set per plant in CR and NR was significantly different to that in the SR region. Species fitness, as determined from in vitro germination assays, showed that seeds harvested from fire-damaged capsules have the lowest cumulative germination percentage. It was also observed that leaf rosettes curled up to form a ball that protects the apical centre of plants from fire damage. Conclusion: A. ortholopha occurs in small population clusters of low density. The species has a low per-capita reproductive output characterised by production of many flowers, but with very low percentage fruit and seed set. The species has low fitness as evidenced by nominal recruitment of saplings and juveniles. Conspecific mates are frequently lost owing to fire and mining activities.
topic aloe ortholopha, great dyke, serpentine, population size structure, germination, reproductive output
url https://journals.abcjournal.aosis.co.za/index.php/abc/article/view/2396
work_keys_str_mv AT ngoniikunonga aspectsofthepopulationbiologylifehistoryandthreatstoaloeortholophachristianandmilneredhaserpentineendemicfromthenortherngreatdykeofzimbabwe
AT tamukanhiwatiwa aspectsofthepopulationbiologylifehistoryandthreatstoaloeortholophachristianandmilneredhaserpentineendemicfromthenortherngreatdykeofzimbabwe
AT mduduzitembani aspectsofthepopulationbiologylifehistoryandthreatstoaloeortholophachristianandmilneredhaserpentineendemicfromthenortherngreatdykeofzimbabwe
AT shakkiekativu aspectsofthepopulationbiologylifehistoryandthreatstoaloeortholophachristianandmilneredhaserpentineendemicfromthenortherngreatdykeofzimbabwe
_version_ 1724951705567625216