کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
86065 | 159163 | 2015 | 8 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
• We assessed the effect of dioecy on spatial and growth patterns in Taxus baccata.
• Female trees are commonly found in favorable microsites and males are widely but sparsely distributed.
• We did not find a clear spatial segregation of the sexes (SSS).
• Annual radial growth was 8.3% greater in females than in males.
Sex-related differences in dioecious woody plants commonly result in spatial segregation of the sexes and a male-biased sex ratio, leading to strongly structured populations. We report results from more than 1000 precisely georeferenced individuals of a threatened European dioecious tree species, Taxus baccata in central Italy. We hypothesized differences between males and females in both spatial distribution and growth pattern. We used point pattern analysis (PPA) to evaluate the spatial distribution of trees as influenced by dioecy and tree size, and dendrochronological methods to study growth pattern differences between males and females. We found a dominance of female trees giving a SR of 0.79, which increased along a gradient of elevation and slope. At the microsite level, female Taxus trees were clumped to a scale of 30 m while male trees were randomly distributed. We observed a significant effect of both sex and decade in the growth pattern of Taxus trees, where annual radial growth of females was 8.3% greater than that of males. Female trees are more commonly found in wetter sites and males are widely but sparsely distributed, causing the absence of a clear spatial segregation of the sexes. Observed differences in spatial and growth patterns of males and females could possibly influence the climate change response of T. baccata, given that range expansion depends upon the availability of seed-bearing, female trees that tend to be clumped in climatically favorable sites.
Journal: Forest Ecology and Management - Volume 358, 15 December 2015, Pages 122–129