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Whitebark pine facilitation at treeline: potential interactions for disruption by an invasive pathogen.
Tomback, Diana F; Blakeslee, Sarah C; Wagner, Aaron C; Wunder, Michael B; Resler, Lynn M; Pyatt, Jill C; Diaz, Soledad.
  • Tomback DF; Department of Integrative Biology Campus Box 171 University of Colorado Denver PO Box 173364 Denver Colorado 80217.
  • Blakeslee SC; Department of Integrative Biology Campus Box 171 University of Colorado Denver PO Box 173364 Denver Colorado 80217.
  • Wagner AC; Department of Integrative Biology Campus Box 171 University of Colorado Denver PO Box 173364 Denver Colorado 80217.
  • Wunder MB; Department of Integrative Biology Campus Box 171 University of Colorado Denver PO Box 173364 Denver Colorado 80217.
  • Resler LM; Department of Geography Virginia Tech 115 Major Williams Hall (0115) Blacksburg Virginia 24061.
  • Pyatt JC; Department of Integrative Biology Campus Box 171 University of Colorado Denver PO Box 173364 Denver Colorado 80217.
  • Diaz S; Department of Integrative Biology Campus Box 171 University of Colorado Denver PO Box 173364 Denver Colorado 80217.
Ecol Evol ; 6(15): 5144-57, 2016 Aug.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27551372
In stressful environments, facilitation often aids plant establishment, but invasive plant pathogens may potentially disrupt these interactions. In many treeline communities in the northern Rocky Mountains of the U.S. and Canada, Pinus albicaulis, a stress-tolerant pine, initiates tree islands at higher frequencies than other conifers - that is, leads to leeward tree establishment more frequently. The facilitation provided by a solitary (isolated) P. albicaulis leading to tree island initiation may be important for different life-history stages for leeward conifers, but it is not known which life-history stages are influenced and protection provided. However, P. albicaulis mortality from the non-native pathogen Cronartium ribicola potentially disrupts these facilitative interactions, reducing tree island initiation. In two Rocky Mountain eastern slope study areas, we experimentally examined fundamental plant-plant interactions which might facilitate tree island formation: the protection offered by P. albicaulis to leeward seed and seedling life-history stages, and to leeward krummholz conifers. In the latter case, we simulated mortality from C. ribicola for windward P. albicaulis to determine whether loss of P. albicaulis from C. ribicola impacts leeward conifers. Relative to other common solitary conifers at treeline, solitary P. albicaulis had higher abundance. More seeds germinated in leeward rock microsites than in conifer or exposed microsites, but the odds of cotyledon seedling survival during the growing season were highest in P. albicaulis microsites. Planted seedling survival was low among all microsites examined. Simulating death of windward P. albicaulis by C. ribicola reduced shoot growth of leeward trees. Loss of P. albicaulis to exotic disease may limit facilitation interactions and conifer community development at treeline and potentially impede upward movement as climate warms.
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Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Idioma: En Año: 2016 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Idioma: En Año: 2016 Tipo del documento: Article