Restoring South African subtropical succulent thicket using Portulacaria afra: exploring the rooting window hypothesis

Drought prone, arid and semi-arid ecosystems are challenging to restore once degraded due to low levels of natural recruitment and survival of reintroduced plants. This is evident in the restoration of degraded succulent thicket habitats in the Albany Subtropical Thicket Biome located in South Afric...

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Main Authors: Nicholas C. Galuszynski, Ryan E. Forbes, Gavin M. Rishworth, Alastair J. Potts
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2023-07-01
Series:PeerJ
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Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/15538.pdf
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author Nicholas C. Galuszynski
Ryan E. Forbes
Gavin M. Rishworth
Alastair J. Potts
author_facet Nicholas C. Galuszynski
Ryan E. Forbes
Gavin M. Rishworth
Alastair J. Potts
author_sort Nicholas C. Galuszynski
collection DOAJ
description Drought prone, arid and semi-arid ecosystems are challenging to restore once degraded due to low levels of natural recruitment and survival of reintroduced plants. This is evident in the restoration of degraded succulent thicket habitats in the Albany Subtropical Thicket Biome located in South Africa. The current restoration practice for this ecosystem focuses predominantly on reintroducing Portulacaria afra L. Jacq., which is naturally dominant in terms of cover and biomass, but largely absent in regions degraded by domestic livestock. This has been achieved by planting unrooted cuttings with limited consideration of soil water availability in a drought-prone ecosystem. This study tests the effects of the timing of water availability after planting on the root development of P. afra cuttings. Cuttings were harvested from seven individual plants and grown in a glasshouse setting. Eighty four cuttings were taken from each individual, twelve for each of the seven watering treatments per individual plant. The treatments represented a time-staggered initial watering after planting, including: on the day of planting, 4 days, 7 days, 14 days, 21 days, and 28 days after planting. After 32 days, all treatments were watered on a bi-weekly basis for two weeks; a control treatment with no watering throughout the experiment was included. The proportion of rooted cuttings per treatment and dry root mass were determined at the end of the experimental period (day 42). The early onset of watering was associated with a higher percentage of rooting (X2(5) = 11.352, p = 0.045) and had a weak, but non-significant, impact on the final dry root mass (F5,36 = 2.109, p = 0.0631). Importantly, no clear rooting window within 28 days was detected as the majority of cuttings exhibited root development (greater than 50% of cuttings rooted for each individual parent-plant); this suggests that watering at the time of planting P. afra cuttings in-field for restoration may not be necessary. An unexpected, but important, result was that parent-plant identity had a strong interaction with the accumulation of root mass (F36,460 = 5.026, p < 0.001; LR7 = 122.99, p < 0.001). The control treatment, which had no water throughout the experiment, had no root development. These findings suggest that water availability is required for the onset of rooting in P. afra cutting. However, the duration of the experiment was insufficient to detect the point at which P. afra cuttings could no longer initiate rooting once exposed to soil moisture, and thus no rooting window could be defined. Despite harvesting material from the same source population, parent-plant identity strongly impacted root development. Further work is required to characterise the rooting window, and to explore the effect of parent-plant condition on in-field and experimental restoration results; we urge that experiments using P. afra closely track the parent-source at the individual level as this may be a factor that may have a major impact on results.
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spelling doaj.art-2b430d07c532472f9e87385ec38632122023-12-03T09:26:40ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592023-07-0111e1553810.7717/peerj.15538Restoring South African subtropical succulent thicket using Portulacaria afra: exploring the rooting window hypothesisNicholas C. Galuszynski0Ryan E. Forbes1Gavin M. Rishworth2Alastair J. Potts3Spekboom Restoration Research Group, Nelson Mandela University, Gqeberha, South AfricaCentre for African Conservation Ecology, Zoology Department, Nelson Mandela University, Gqeberha, South AfricaInstitute for Coastal and Marine Research, Nelson Mandela University, Gqeberha, South AfricaSpekboom Restoration Research Group, Nelson Mandela University, Gqeberha, South AfricaDrought prone, arid and semi-arid ecosystems are challenging to restore once degraded due to low levels of natural recruitment and survival of reintroduced plants. This is evident in the restoration of degraded succulent thicket habitats in the Albany Subtropical Thicket Biome located in South Africa. The current restoration practice for this ecosystem focuses predominantly on reintroducing Portulacaria afra L. Jacq., which is naturally dominant in terms of cover and biomass, but largely absent in regions degraded by domestic livestock. This has been achieved by planting unrooted cuttings with limited consideration of soil water availability in a drought-prone ecosystem. This study tests the effects of the timing of water availability after planting on the root development of P. afra cuttings. Cuttings were harvested from seven individual plants and grown in a glasshouse setting. Eighty four cuttings were taken from each individual, twelve for each of the seven watering treatments per individual plant. The treatments represented a time-staggered initial watering after planting, including: on the day of planting, 4 days, 7 days, 14 days, 21 days, and 28 days after planting. After 32 days, all treatments were watered on a bi-weekly basis for two weeks; a control treatment with no watering throughout the experiment was included. The proportion of rooted cuttings per treatment and dry root mass were determined at the end of the experimental period (day 42). The early onset of watering was associated with a higher percentage of rooting (X2(5) = 11.352, p = 0.045) and had a weak, but non-significant, impact on the final dry root mass (F5,36 = 2.109, p = 0.0631). Importantly, no clear rooting window within 28 days was detected as the majority of cuttings exhibited root development (greater than 50% of cuttings rooted for each individual parent-plant); this suggests that watering at the time of planting P. afra cuttings in-field for restoration may not be necessary. An unexpected, but important, result was that parent-plant identity had a strong interaction with the accumulation of root mass (F36,460 = 5.026, p < 0.001; LR7 = 122.99, p < 0.001). The control treatment, which had no water throughout the experiment, had no root development. These findings suggest that water availability is required for the onset of rooting in P. afra cutting. However, the duration of the experiment was insufficient to detect the point at which P. afra cuttings could no longer initiate rooting once exposed to soil moisture, and thus no rooting window could be defined. Despite harvesting material from the same source population, parent-plant identity strongly impacted root development. Further work is required to characterise the rooting window, and to explore the effect of parent-plant condition on in-field and experimental restoration results; we urge that experiments using P. afra closely track the parent-source at the individual level as this may be a factor that may have a major impact on results.https://peerj.com/articles/15538.pdfSpekboomSource population materialRevegetationDroughtPlant reintroduction
spellingShingle Nicholas C. Galuszynski
Ryan E. Forbes
Gavin M. Rishworth
Alastair J. Potts
Restoring South African subtropical succulent thicket using Portulacaria afra: exploring the rooting window hypothesis
PeerJ
Spekboom
Source population material
Revegetation
Drought
Plant reintroduction
title Restoring South African subtropical succulent thicket using Portulacaria afra: exploring the rooting window hypothesis
title_full Restoring South African subtropical succulent thicket using Portulacaria afra: exploring the rooting window hypothesis
title_fullStr Restoring South African subtropical succulent thicket using Portulacaria afra: exploring the rooting window hypothesis
title_full_unstemmed Restoring South African subtropical succulent thicket using Portulacaria afra: exploring the rooting window hypothesis
title_short Restoring South African subtropical succulent thicket using Portulacaria afra: exploring the rooting window hypothesis
title_sort restoring south african subtropical succulent thicket using portulacaria afra exploring the rooting window hypothesis
topic Spekboom
Source population material
Revegetation
Drought
Plant reintroduction
url https://peerj.com/articles/15538.pdf
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