Boreal conifer seedling responses to experimental competition removal during summer drought

Abstract The southern range limit of white spruce (Picea glauca) in western Canada is believed to arise from effects of moisture limitation on seedling recruitment. Within stands near white spruce’s range limit, the adverse effects of water limitation on seedling growth and survival may be compounde...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tanvir Ahmed Shovon, Daniel Gagnon, Mark C. Vanderwel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-02-01
Series:Ecosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.3391
id doaj-1231f3dde09645ebaf6ba00956d1a6b5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1231f3dde09645ebaf6ba00956d1a6b52021-02-25T04:16:44ZengWileyEcosphere2150-89252021-02-01122n/an/a10.1002/ecs2.3391Boreal conifer seedling responses to experimental competition removal during summer droughtTanvir Ahmed Shovon0Daniel Gagnon1Mark C. Vanderwel2Department of Biology University of Regina 3737 Wascana Parkway Regina SaskatchewanS4S0A2CanadaDepartment of Biology University of Regina 3737 Wascana Parkway Regina SaskatchewanS4S0A2CanadaDepartment of Biology University of Regina 3737 Wascana Parkway Regina SaskatchewanS4S0A2CanadaAbstract The southern range limit of white spruce (Picea glauca) in western Canada is believed to arise from effects of moisture limitation on seedling recruitment. Within stands near white spruce’s range limit, the adverse effects of water limitation on seedling growth and survival may be compounded by competition from neighboring understory plants and trees. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a competition removal experiment on white spruce seedlings in the Cypress Hills, an isolated forest landscape within the Canadian Prairies. We measured the height and diameter at root collar of 371 natural seedlings, and then we manually cleared all vegetation within a 75‐cm radius of 83 seedlings to remove local competition from neighboring plants. In addition to removal of neighboring plants, we excavated a 75‐cm radius trench around another 46 of these seedlings to remove competition for belowground resources. We took hemispherical photographs above each seedling to calculate canopy openness (a proxy for light availability) and re‐measured height and diameter over two years to calculate pre‐ and post‐treatment growth. There was a pronounced difference in precipitation between the two years of our experiment, with spring–summer precipitation 58% higher than average in the pre‐treatment year and 62% lower than average in the post‐treatment year. The diameter growth and survival of seedlings growing without competition showed smaller decreases in the dry post‐treatment year than control seedlings. Removing competition by trenching increased the height growth of seedlings located under an open canopy, but not of those growing under heavy shade. These interactions suggest that white spruce regeneration in water‐limited areas is sensitive to both light availability and local competition. Competition exacerbated drought effects on seedlings, which suggests that frequent droughts could have greater negative impacts on boreal tree seedlings that are growing under a closed canopy.https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.3391below‐ground competitiondroughtheight growthlightnitrogenradial growth
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tanvir Ahmed Shovon
Daniel Gagnon
Mark C. Vanderwel
spellingShingle Tanvir Ahmed Shovon
Daniel Gagnon
Mark C. Vanderwel
Boreal conifer seedling responses to experimental competition removal during summer drought
Ecosphere
below‐ground competition
drought
height growth
light
nitrogen
radial growth
author_facet Tanvir Ahmed Shovon
Daniel Gagnon
Mark C. Vanderwel
author_sort Tanvir Ahmed Shovon
title Boreal conifer seedling responses to experimental competition removal during summer drought
title_short Boreal conifer seedling responses to experimental competition removal during summer drought
title_full Boreal conifer seedling responses to experimental competition removal during summer drought
title_fullStr Boreal conifer seedling responses to experimental competition removal during summer drought
title_full_unstemmed Boreal conifer seedling responses to experimental competition removal during summer drought
title_sort boreal conifer seedling responses to experimental competition removal during summer drought
publisher Wiley
series Ecosphere
issn 2150-8925
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract The southern range limit of white spruce (Picea glauca) in western Canada is believed to arise from effects of moisture limitation on seedling recruitment. Within stands near white spruce’s range limit, the adverse effects of water limitation on seedling growth and survival may be compounded by competition from neighboring understory plants and trees. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a competition removal experiment on white spruce seedlings in the Cypress Hills, an isolated forest landscape within the Canadian Prairies. We measured the height and diameter at root collar of 371 natural seedlings, and then we manually cleared all vegetation within a 75‐cm radius of 83 seedlings to remove local competition from neighboring plants. In addition to removal of neighboring plants, we excavated a 75‐cm radius trench around another 46 of these seedlings to remove competition for belowground resources. We took hemispherical photographs above each seedling to calculate canopy openness (a proxy for light availability) and re‐measured height and diameter over two years to calculate pre‐ and post‐treatment growth. There was a pronounced difference in precipitation between the two years of our experiment, with spring–summer precipitation 58% higher than average in the pre‐treatment year and 62% lower than average in the post‐treatment year. The diameter growth and survival of seedlings growing without competition showed smaller decreases in the dry post‐treatment year than control seedlings. Removing competition by trenching increased the height growth of seedlings located under an open canopy, but not of those growing under heavy shade. These interactions suggest that white spruce regeneration in water‐limited areas is sensitive to both light availability and local competition. Competition exacerbated drought effects on seedlings, which suggests that frequent droughts could have greater negative impacts on boreal tree seedlings that are growing under a closed canopy.
topic below‐ground competition
drought
height growth
light
nitrogen
radial growth
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.3391
work_keys_str_mv AT tanvirahmedshovon borealconiferseedlingresponsestoexperimentalcompetitionremovalduringsummerdrought
AT danielgagnon borealconiferseedlingresponsestoexperimentalcompetitionremovalduringsummerdrought
AT markcvanderwel borealconiferseedlingresponsestoexperimentalcompetitionremovalduringsummerdrought
_version_ 1724252148691107840