4.6 Article

Trampling, defoliation and physiological integration affect growth, morphological and mechanical properties of a root-suckering clonal tree

Journal

ANNALS OF BOTANY
Volume 109, Issue 5, Pages 1001-1008

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcs006

Keywords

Biomechanics; clonal integration; defoliation; drylands; grazing; Populus simonii; resource sharing; root connections; root severing; trampling

Categories

Funding

  1. Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences [02CDC015, 99CDC027]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31070371, 30821062]

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Grazing is a complex process involving the simultaneous occurrence of both trampling and defoliation. Clonal plants are a common feature of heavily grazed ecosystems where large herbivores inflict the simultaneous pressures of trampling and defoliation on the vegetation. We test the hypothesis that physiological integration (resource sharing between interconnected ramets) may help plants to deal with the interactive effects of trampling and defoliation. In a field study, small and large ramets of the root-suckering clonal tree Populus simonii were subjected to two levels of trampling and defoliation, while connected or disconnected to other ramets. Plant responses were quantified via survival, growth, morphological and stem mechanical traits. Disconnection and trampling increased mortality, especially in small ramets. Trampling increased stem length, basal diameter, fibrous root mass, stem stiffness and resistance to deflection in connected ramets, but decreased them in disconnected ones. Trampling decreased vertical height more in disconnected than in connected ramets, and reduced stem mass in disconnected ramets but not in connected ramets. Defoliation reduced basal diameter, leaf mass, stem mass and leaf area ratio, but did not interact with trampling or disconnection. Although clonal integration did not influence defoliation response, it did alleviate the effects of trampling. We suggest that by facilitating resource transport between ramets, clonal integration compensates for trampling-induced damage to fine roots.

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