A spatially explicit analysis of seedling recruitment in the terrestrial orchid Orchis purpurea

Hans Jacquemyn, Rein Brys, Katrien Vandepitte, Olivier Honnay, Isabel Roldan-Ruiz, Thorsten Wiegand

    Onderzoeksoutput: Bijdrage aan tijdschriftA1: Web of Science-artikelpeer review

    Uittreksel

    Seed dispersal and the subsequent recruitment of new individuals into a population are important processes affecting the population dynamics, genetic diversity and spatial genetic structure of plant populations.

    Spatial patterns of seedling recruitment were investigated in two populations of the terrestrial orchid Orchis purpurea using both univariate and bivariate point pattern analysis, parentage analysis and seed germination experiments.

    Both adults and recruits showed a clustered spatial distribution with cluster radii of c. 4-5 m. The parentage analysis resulted in offspring-dispersal distances that were slightly larger than distances obtained from the point pattern analyses. The suitability of microsites for germination differed among sites, with strong constraints in one site and almost no constraints in the other.

    These results provide a clear and coherent picture of recruitment patterns in a tuberous, perennial orchid. Seed dispersal is limited to a few metres from the mother plant, whereas the availability of suitable germination conditions may vary strongly from one site to the next. Because of a time lag of 3-4 yr between seed dispersal and actual recruitment, and irregular flowering and fruiting patterns of adult plants, interpretation of recruitment patterns using point patterns analyses ideally should take into account the demographic properties of orchid populations.

    Oorspronkelijke taalEngels
    TijdschriftNew Phytologist
    Volume176
    Exemplaarnummer2
    Pagina's (van-tot)448-459
    Aantal pagina’s12
    ISSN0028-646X
    DOI's
    PublicatiestatusGepubliceerd - 2007

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