HAO Peng, LI Jing-wen, ZHOU Wei-lei, LIU Qian-wen, ZHANG Yu-bo. Spatial pattern and utility of Populus euphratica seed rain: a simulation study combined with field investigations[J]. Forest Ecosystems, 2012, 14(3): 169-179. DOI: 10.1007/s11632-012-0303-2
Citation: HAO Peng, LI Jing-wen, ZHOU Wei-lei, LIU Qian-wen, ZHANG Yu-bo. Spatial pattern and utility of Populus euphratica seed rain: a simulation study combined with field investigations[J]. Forest Ecosystems, 2012, 14(3): 169-179. DOI: 10.1007/s11632-012-0303-2

Spatial pattern and utility of Populus euphratica seed rain: a simulation study combined with field investigations

  • Seed dispersal is a fundamental process affecting destinies of seeds and seedlings, as well as regeneration dynamics and distribution patterns of communities. Recently however, declining Populus euphratica forests have failed to regenerate by seeding, while the spatial pattern and utility of their seed rains are unclear. In this study, we designed a model to simulate seed rains based on field investigations by fitting our observations to a normal distribution and testing the model with data from three years, with acceptable results. We examined the simulated results of dispersed seeds patterns on the classification of three factors, i.e., density of Sophora alopecuroides, surface soil moisture and surface soil salinity. The results of seed rain simulation show that over 70% of seeds were dispersed and confined to each of the three plots where their mother trees located. The proportion of 3:7 seeds dispersed inside and outside each plots remained largely unaltered. The differences in the amounts of dispersed seed among the different levels of each of the factors were not significant, although the distributing pattern of P. euphratica in each plot varied. Therefore, in P. euphratica communities, the amount of seed does not become a constraint in subsequent germination, although the surface environment does. We conclude that successful P. euphratica seed regeneration relies on less than 30% of seeds dispersed over longer distance to colonize favorable growth habitats.
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