The influence of variable rainfall frequency on germination and early growth of shade-tolerant dipterocarp seedlings in borneo.

Climate change induced alterations to rainfall patterns have the potential to affect the regeneration dynamics of plant species, especially in historically everwet tropical rainforest. Differential species response to infrequent rainfall may influence seed germination and seedling establishment in t...

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Main Authors: Michael J O'Brien, Christopher D Philipson, John Tay, Andy Hector
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3722165?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-729245c0bece485ca44fc5ed0a9f11152020-11-24T21:12:04ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0187e7028710.1371/journal.pone.0070287The influence of variable rainfall frequency on germination and early growth of shade-tolerant dipterocarp seedlings in borneo.Michael J O'BrienChristopher D PhilipsonJohn TayAndy HectorClimate change induced alterations to rainfall patterns have the potential to affect the regeneration dynamics of plant species, especially in historically everwet tropical rainforest. Differential species response to infrequent rainfall may influence seed germination and seedling establishment in turn affecting species distributions. We tested the role of watering frequency intervals (from daily to six-day watering) on the germination and the early growth of Dipterocarpaceae seedlings in Borneo. We used seeds that ranged in size from 500 to 20,000 mg in order to test the role of seed mass in mediating the effects of infrequent watering. With frequent rainfall, germination and seedling development traits bore no relationship to seed mass, but all metrics of seedling growth increased with increasing seed mass. Cumulative germination declined by 39.4% on average for all species when plants were watered at six-day intervals, and days to germination increased by 76.5% on average for all species from daily to six-day intervals. Final height and biomass declined on average in the six-day interval by 16% and 30%, respectively, but the percentage decrease in final size was greater for large-seeded species. Rooting depth per leaf area also significantly declined with seed mass indicating large-seeded species allocate relatively more biomass for leaf production. This difference in allocation provided an establishment advantage to large-seeded species when water was non-limiting but inhibited their growth under infrequent rainfall. The observed reduction in the growth of large-seeded species under infrequent rainfall would likely restrict their establishment in drier microsites associated with coarse sandy soils and ridge tops. In total, these species differences in germination and initial seedling growth indicates a possible niche axis that may help explain both current species distributions and future responses to climate change.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3722165?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael J O'Brien
Christopher D Philipson
John Tay
Andy Hector
spellingShingle Michael J O'Brien
Christopher D Philipson
John Tay
Andy Hector
The influence of variable rainfall frequency on germination and early growth of shade-tolerant dipterocarp seedlings in borneo.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Michael J O'Brien
Christopher D Philipson
John Tay
Andy Hector
author_sort Michael J O'Brien
title The influence of variable rainfall frequency on germination and early growth of shade-tolerant dipterocarp seedlings in borneo.
title_short The influence of variable rainfall frequency on germination and early growth of shade-tolerant dipterocarp seedlings in borneo.
title_full The influence of variable rainfall frequency on germination and early growth of shade-tolerant dipterocarp seedlings in borneo.
title_fullStr The influence of variable rainfall frequency on germination and early growth of shade-tolerant dipterocarp seedlings in borneo.
title_full_unstemmed The influence of variable rainfall frequency on germination and early growth of shade-tolerant dipterocarp seedlings in borneo.
title_sort influence of variable rainfall frequency on germination and early growth of shade-tolerant dipterocarp seedlings in borneo.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Climate change induced alterations to rainfall patterns have the potential to affect the regeneration dynamics of plant species, especially in historically everwet tropical rainforest. Differential species response to infrequent rainfall may influence seed germination and seedling establishment in turn affecting species distributions. We tested the role of watering frequency intervals (from daily to six-day watering) on the germination and the early growth of Dipterocarpaceae seedlings in Borneo. We used seeds that ranged in size from 500 to 20,000 mg in order to test the role of seed mass in mediating the effects of infrequent watering. With frequent rainfall, germination and seedling development traits bore no relationship to seed mass, but all metrics of seedling growth increased with increasing seed mass. Cumulative germination declined by 39.4% on average for all species when plants were watered at six-day intervals, and days to germination increased by 76.5% on average for all species from daily to six-day intervals. Final height and biomass declined on average in the six-day interval by 16% and 30%, respectively, but the percentage decrease in final size was greater for large-seeded species. Rooting depth per leaf area also significantly declined with seed mass indicating large-seeded species allocate relatively more biomass for leaf production. This difference in allocation provided an establishment advantage to large-seeded species when water was non-limiting but inhibited their growth under infrequent rainfall. The observed reduction in the growth of large-seeded species under infrequent rainfall would likely restrict their establishment in drier microsites associated with coarse sandy soils and ridge tops. In total, these species differences in germination and initial seedling growth indicates a possible niche axis that may help explain both current species distributions and future responses to climate change.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3722165?pdf=render
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