BIBLIOS

  Ciências References Management System

Visitor Mode (Login)
Need help?


Back

Publication details

Document type
Journal articles

Document subtype
Full paper

Title
Grazing hinders seed dispersal during crop failure in a declining oak woodland

Participants in the publication
Pedro G. Vaz (Author)
Dep. Biologia Vegetal
cE3c
Miguel N. Bugalho (Author)
Jose M. Fedriani (Author)

Summary
Masting, the synchronized production of variable quantities of seeds, is a global phenomenon in diverse ecosystems, including treed grazing systems where trees and grazing animals coexist. This phenomenon can be interspersed with years of extreme crop failure, whose frequency and unpredictability are increasing. Yet, the combined impact of crop failure and grazing on seed dispersal and seed-to-seedling transition remains poorly understood. To address this concern, we investigated rodent-mediated cork-oak (Quercus suber) acorn predation, dispersal, and seedling emergence in cattle grazed and non-grazed areas in central Portugal during years with contrasting masting seasons. We found that the acorns supplied in the crop failure year were dispersed more rapidly and over longer distances than those supplied in the crop success year when other acorns were naturally available. The crop failure year also had 83 % more dispersal events and 84 % more predated acorns than the reproductive success year. However, the higher acorn predation was offset by a 2.4-fold higher percentage of unpredated dispersed acorns recruiting into seedlings. Both years ended up recruiting a similar number of seedlings. Acorns emerged seedlings 3.4 times farther in the crop failure year than in the crop success year. Cattle grazing was the main constraint on seed dispersal distance by rodents, reducing it by 53 %. Our study provides empirical evidence that cattle grazing modulates how an extreme crop failure year can surprisingly be an opportunity for the few existing acorns to have seedlings established farther apart than in a crop success year. If we are to better manage and preserve the high conservation and socio-economic value of Mediterranean cork oak woodlands in the face of climate change, we must prioritize fecund trees and carefully manage seed dispersal factors such as cattle grazing, particularly during years of crop failure.

Date of Submisson/Request
2023-06-15
Date of Acceptance
2023-10-12
Date of Publication
2024-01

Where published
Science of The Total Environment

Publication Identifiers
ISSN - 0048-9697

Publisher
Elsevier BV

Volume
907

Starting page
167835

Document Identifiers
DOI - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.167835
URL - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.167835

Download

Export

APA
Pedro G. Vaz, Miguel N. Bugalho, Jose M. Fedriani, (2024). Grazing hinders seed dispersal during crop failure in a declining oak woodland. Science of The Total Environment, 907, ISSN 0048-9697. eISSN . http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.167835

IEEE
Pedro G. Vaz, Miguel N. Bugalho, Jose M. Fedriani, "Grazing hinders seed dispersal during crop failure in a declining oak woodland" in Science of The Total Environment, vol. 907, 2024. 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.167835

BIBTEX
@article{59659, author = {Pedro G. Vaz and Miguel N. Bugalho and Jose M. Fedriani}, title = {Grazing hinders seed dispersal during crop failure in a declining oak woodland}, journal = {Science of The Total Environment}, year = 2024, volume = 907 }