• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Effect of Shrubs on Recruitment of Quercus Douglasii and Quercus Lobata in California
  • Contributor: Callaway, Ragan M.
  • Published: Wiley, 1992
  • Published in: Ecology, 73 (1992) 6, Seite 2118-2128
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.2307/1941460
  • ISSN: 1939-9170; 0012-9658
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: Biologically derived safe sites appear to strongly affect spatial and temporal patterns in terrestrial plant communities; however, few experimental field studies have been conducted to investigate the importance of such interactions or the mechanisms by which they operate. Quercus douglasii and Quercus lobata are winter—deciduous oaks endemic to California. I examined association between seedlings of these oaks and several species of shrubs and conducted field experiments that tested for facilitative effects of two shrubs, Salvia leucophylla and Artemisia californica, on seedling survival. Naturally occurring Q. douglasii seedlings were relatively common (280 seedlings/ha) and were strongly associated with shrub canopies. In two experimental plantings, 30% and 55% of Q. douglasii seedlings that emerged under shrubs survived for >1 yr, whereas no seedlings in the open survived in either experiment. Survival of Q. douglasii where shrubs were removed was similar to survival in the open grassland, indicting that association between shrubs and oak seedlings was not due to share microsite requirements. Q. douglasii survival was not different between the two shrub species. Only three Q. lobata seedlings were found in 26 study plots, although reproductive adults were present. The seedlings were under shrub canopies. However, the survival of Q. lobata was not facilitated by shrub cover or shrub simulation and no other evidence was found for nurse—shrub interactions with this oak species. Artificial shade was critical to the survival of Q. douglasii seedlings in simulated shrub environments. When grown in artificial shade, photosynthetic capacities and root elongation rates of Q. douglasii seedlings were significantly higher than those of Q. lobata. These differences may partially explain why nurse—plant interactions exist between shrubs and Q. douglasii seedling mortality differed between the shrub and open grassland habitats. Under shrubs, acorn predation was the primary cause of mortality, whereas mortality due to shoot herbivory was much more frequent in the open grassland. Thus, propagules under shrubs that avoided predation until shoot emergence benefitted from canopy shade and protection from herbivores. The shade tolerance and nurse—plant utilization of Q. douglasii seedlings have parallels with shade tolerance and late successional roles of other oak species in temperature deciduous forests, and, as in these forests, may affect the long—term spatial dynamics in California woodlands.