DEMOGRAPHICS OF MORE THAN 12,000 INDIVIDUALS OF A KEYSTONE SPECIES IN THE NORTHERN SONORAN DESERT SINCE THE MID-1800S

被引:8
作者
Danzer, Shelley [2 ]
Drezner, Taly Dawn [1 ]
机构
[1] York Univ, Dept Geog, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada
[2] Arizona Army Natl Guard, Phoenix, AZ 85008 USA
关键词
Arizona; Carnegiea gigantea; plant-climate interactions; saguaro cactus; volcanism; SAGUARO CARNEGIEA-GIGANTEA; EL-NINO; SEEDLING ESTABLISHMENT; SUMMER PRECIPITATION; VOLCANIC-ERUPTIONS; CO2; CONCENTRATIONS; VEGETATION CHANGE; AMERICAN RANGE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; UNITED-STATES;
D O I
10.1086/652013
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
We studied a cohort-based, long-lived species to determine whether favorable periods that promote regeneration are driven by local, regional, or global-scale factors. Limited demographic data exist for the keystone species Carnegiea gigantea over its range. We obtained a data set collected for 12,232 plants over an area of more than 11 km(2) at a restricted military zone, located far from any other studied population. We developed the establishment pattern for the species over the last 200 yr and compared population growth trends with those for other sites and with global-scale volcanism, which has been previously linked to the regeneration of the species. This population was significantly related to the two closer sites, suggesting a regional influence in regeneration and cohort establishment. Other eastern sites like ours also exhibited a regeneration peak in the 1920s. This population was not significantly related to volcanic eruptions, as has been documented elsewhere, though this may be due to subsequent mortality at the site, which would have effectively erased the record of establishment in past periods. Unlike past work, our study goes beyond a single population. We synthesized data from other known populations in order to produce, for the first time, a coherent picture of the patterns of regeneration over much of the species' range. Large-scale climatic (e. g., unusually rainy periods) and geologic (global-scale volcanism) events promote the establishment of cohorts during the same time periods historically, though to differing extents in different populations: hot, western populations have particularly large cohorts in response to volcanism, while more eastern sites may have observable cohorts during known wetter periods. Thus, these different large-scale phenomena appear to be of varying significance in a population on the basis of the population's location and associated environment. This provides insight into global climate change impacts on the species, whose keystone status will ultimately affect the success of and changes in the entire biome.
引用
收藏
页码:538 / 546
页数:9
相关论文
共 59 条
[1]   Proxy evidence for an El Nino-like response to volcanic forcing [J].
Adams, JB ;
Mann, ME ;
Ammann, CM .
NATURE, 2003, 426 (6964) :274-278
[2]  
ALCORN STANLEY M., 1962, PLANT DIS REPORTER, V46, P156
[3]  
BRUM G D, 1973, Madrono, V22, P195
[5]   SYNOPTIC-DYNAMIC CHARACTER OF BURSTS AND BREAKS IN THE SOUTHWEST UNITED-STATES SUMMER PRECIPITATION SINGULARITY [J].
CARLETON, AM .
JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, 1986, 6 (06) :605-623
[6]   Causes of climate change over the past 1000 years [J].
Crowley, TJ .
SCIENCE, 2000, 289 (5477) :270-277
[7]   Responses of CAM species to increasing atmospheric CO2 concentrations [J].
Drennan, PM ;
Nobel, PS .
PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT, 2000, 23 (08) :767-781
[8]   An analysis of winter temperature and dew point under the canopy of a common Sonoran Desert nurse and the implications for positive plant interactions [J].
Drezner, T. D. .
JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS, 2007, 69 (04) :554-568
[9]   Regeneration cycles of the keystone species Carnegiea gigantea are linked to worldwide volcanism [J].
Drezner, Taly Dawn ;
Balling, Jr. Robert C. .
JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, 2008, 19 (05) :587-596
[10]   The regeneration of a protected Sonoran Desert cactus since 1800 AD over 50,000 km2 of its range [J].
Drezner, Taly Dawn .
PLANT ECOLOGY, 2006, 183 (01) :171-176