The importance of dispersal in determining seed versus safe site limitation of plant populations
Authored by William H Satterthwaite
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1007/s11258-006-9252-y
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The traditional dichotomy of seed versus safe site limitation of plant
populations is an oversimplification. While most plant models implicitly
assume that the number of safe sites colonized will increase directly
with increased seed production by each plant, the number of sites
colonized may also strongly depend on patterns of seed dispersal
relative to the parent plant, since the majority of a plant's seeds are
deposited very close to it and so not all safe sites are equally
accessible. I created a series of spatially explicit individual based
plant population models exploring how seed versus safe site limitation
is jointly affected by the number of seeds produced per plant and mean
dispersal distances. While increased dispersal distance led to reduced
seed limitation (more saturation of available safe sites) when a parent
plant's site was temporarily unsuitable following its death, increased
dispersal distances could increase seed limitation, especially at low
per-plant fecundities, if safe sites did not turn over through time.
Models comparing localized to global seed dispersal indicated
substantially different degrees of seed limitation for constant
per-plant fecundities. Thus seed addition experiments need to be
designed to add seeds in realistic spatial patterns to yield meaningful
results.
Tags
Competition
Dynamics
Coexistence
Heterogeneity
ecology
habitat
forests
fitness
Recruitment limitation
Migrant birds