4.6 Article

Bud protection: a key trait for species sorting in a forest-savanna mosaic

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 207, Issue 4, Pages 1052-1060

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.13406

Keywords

bark; biome; bud protection; fire frequency; forest; R-mode linked to Q-mode (RLQ); root-sucker; savanna

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Funding

  1. SAVARID Project [ANR-11-CEPL-003-06]

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Contrasting fire regimes maintain patch mosaics of savanna, thicket and forest biomes in many African subtropical landscapes. Species dominating each biome are thus expected to display distinct fire-related traits, commonly thought to be bark related. Recent Australian savanna research suggests that bud position, not bark protection alone, determines fire resilience via resprouting. We tested first how bud position influences resprouting ability in 17 tree species. We then compared the effect of both bark-related protection and bud position on the distribution of 63 tree species in 253 transects in all three biomes. Tree species with buds positioned deep under bark had a higher proportion of post-fire aboveground shoot resprouting. Species with low bud protection occurred in fire-prone biomes only if they could root-sucker. The effect of bud protection was supported by a good relationship between species bud protection and distribution across a gradient of fire frequency. Bud protection and high bark production are required to survive frequent fires in savanna. Forests are fire refugia hosting species with little or no bud protection and thin bark. Root-suckering species occur in the three biomes, suggesting that fire is not the only factor filtering this functional type.

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