VARIATION IN BASAL SPROUTING IN COOCCURRING SHRUBS - IMPLICATIONS FOR STAND DYNAMICS

被引:11
作者
FLINN, RC
SCIFRES, CJ
ARCHER, SR
机构
[1] Department of Rangeland Ecology and Management, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas
关键词
DISTURBANCE; RESILIENCE; ROOT SPROUTING; SUCCESSION; THORN WOODLAND; VEGETATIVE REGENERATION; TEXAS;
D O I
10.2307/3236007
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Sources of basal sprouting for five shrub species representing five plant families common to the Tamaulipan biotic province were quantified, following four intensities of top removal. Among undisturbed shrubs, Celtis pallida and Zanthoxylum fagara were somewhat arborescent, with one or two dominant primary stems per plant. Aloysia gratissima, Ziziphus obtusifolia and Schaefferia cuneifolia were fruticose in architecture, with more and smaller stems. following top removal, each species exhibited a distinct regenerative hierarchy whereby shoot production following disturbance was primarily from structures immediately subtending the removed tissues, even though more distal tissues had the capacity for shoot production. Thus, removal of stems to a 5 cm residual increased the contribution of primary stems from stem bases, whereas stem removal to ground line typically induced regeneration from root crowns. Schaefferia, Zanthoxylum and Ziziphus were capable of producing shoots from root tissue, yet regeneration from roots was not stimulated until tissues were removed to below root crowns. Field observations indicate that most woody species in the subtropical thron woodlands of southern Texas, USA, are highly persistent in the face of natural and anthropogenic disturbance, owing to their ability to regenerate vegetatively. Alternative sources of stem replacement contribute to the high resilience of these shrubs following disturbance and may help explain or predict patterns of secondary succession and plant persistence following various intensities of disturbance.
引用
收藏
页码:125 / 128
页数:4
相关论文
共 13 条
[1]  
Box T.W., Powell J., Drawe D.L., Influence of fire on south Texas chaparral communities, Ecology, 43, pp. 955-961, (1967)
[2]  
Carter G.M., Effects of drought on mesquite, Journal of Range Management, 17, pp. 275-276, (1964)
[3]  
Correll D.S., Johnston M.C., Manual of the vascular plants of Texas., (1979)
[4]  
Flinn M.A., Wein R.W., Depth of underground plant organs and theoretical survival during fire, Canadian Journal of Botany, 55, pp. 2550-2554, (1977)
[5]  
Hamilton W.T., Kitchen L.M., Scifres C.J., Height replacement of selected woody plants following burning or shredding., (1981)
[6]  
Jones R.H., Raynal D.J., Root sprouting in American beech Fagus grandifolia: effects of root injury, root exposure, and season, For. Ecol. Manage., 25, pp. 79-90, (1988)
[7]  
Keeley J.E., Keeley S.C., Chaparral, North American terrestrial vegetation, pp. 165-207, (1988)
[8]  
Koerth B.H., Scifres C.J., Flinn R.C., Crane R.A., Influence of pre‐ and post‐application management practices on the efficacy of pelleted herbicides, Management of south Texas mixed brush with herbicides, pp. 37-44, (1989)
[9]  
Lonard R.I., Judd F.W., Effects of a severe freeze on native woody plants in the lower Rio Grande Valley, Texas, The Southwestern Naturalist, 30, pp. 397-403, (1985)
[10]  
Scifres C.J., Brush management., (1980)