DISTURBANCE, LIFE HISTORY STRATEGIES, AND SEED FATES IN ALPINE HERBFIELD COMMUNITIES

Species responses to disturbance are governed primarily by their life history and physiological traits and by the characteristics of the disturbance. Species reproductive traits are especially important in determining the potential of species to establish and to persist following disturbance. Herein...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:American Journal of Botany
Main Author: Chambers, Jeanne C.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/j.1537-2197.1995.tb12647.x
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Summary:Species responses to disturbance are governed primarily by their life history and physiological traits and by the characteristics of the disturbance. Species reproductive traits are especially important in determining the potential of species to establish and to persist following disturbance. Herein, I review available literature on relationships among disturbance, species life histories, and seed fates in tundra environments. Research conducted on these relationships in alpine herbfield vegetation on the Beartooth Plateau, Montana, over the past 9 yr by my colleagues and myself is synthesized. In tundra environments, species reproductive capacities are often similar to those in more temperate environments, but short, cool growing seasons constrain seed production and reduce seedling growth and survival. Highly variable growing season conditions result in large differences in seed production and seedling establishment among years. On disturbed sites, disturbance characteristics determine the seed and seedling environment and influence rates of establishment. In these windy environments, relationships among soil surface characteristics and seed morphological attributes determine both the horizontal and vertical movement of seeds on exposed soils. Once seeds are incorporated into the soil, soil physical and chemical properties determine temperature and nutrient regimes and have the greatest effects on seed germination and seedling growth and survival. Examining the seed fates of herbfield species with varying life histories illustrates that the identities of species that establish following disturbance are largely predictable from their reproductive traits. Disturbance characteristics determine the success of different reproductive strategies and significantly influence community structure.