The Importance of Initial Seedling Characteristics in Controlling Allocation to Growth and Reserves under Different Soil Moisture Conditions
After disturbance, forest regeneration and resiliency depend on the ability of seedlings to respond, survive, and grow under a variety of stress conditions, including drought. Despite recent efforts to improve our fundamental knowledge surrounding plant response mechanisms to stress and their applic...
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MDPI AG
2023-04-01
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Series: | Forests |
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Online Access: | https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/14/4/796 |
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author | Simon M. Landhäusser Erin T. Wiley Kevin A. Solarik Shaun P. Kulbaba Alexander E. Goeppel |
author_facet | Simon M. Landhäusser Erin T. Wiley Kevin A. Solarik Shaun P. Kulbaba Alexander E. Goeppel |
author_sort | Simon M. Landhäusser |
collection | DOAJ |
description | After disturbance, forest regeneration and resiliency depend on the ability of seedlings to respond, survive, and grow under a variety of stress conditions, including drought. Despite recent efforts to improve our fundamental knowledge surrounding plant response mechanisms to stress and their application in seedling quality research, initial seedling characteristics are often ignored when exploring seedling responses to stress in field plantings or ecophysiological studies. Here, we explore how initial differences in size, biomass allocation, and non-structural carbohydrate (NSC) storage affect the subsequent partitioning of new biomass, growth potential, and drought response in seedlings of a deciduous broad-leaved (<i>Populus tremuloides</i>) and an evergreen coniferous species (<i>Pinus banksiana</i>). We exposed seedlings of both species to different growing conditions in their first growing season in order to manipulate the aforementioned seedling characteristics. In a second growing season, we exposed these different seedling types to a subsequent drought stress. While drought reduced both structural growth and NSC storage in all seedling types, the expected shift in allocation favoring roots was only observed in seedling types with initially low root:shoot or root:stem ratios. Overall, we also found that the traits associated with greater growth were quite different between pine and aspen. While larger seedlings led to greater growth in pine, it was the smallest seedling type in aspen with the largest root:stem ratio that produced the most new growth. In aspen, this smaller seedling type was the only one that did not undergo a shift in biomass relative to its initial allometry, suggesting that adjustments in biomass allocation made by other, larger seedling types must have come at the cost of lower growth. In contrast, adjustments in allocation did not appear to negatively impact pine, possibly because reduced root:shoot ratios of larger seedlings did not reduce NSC storage, as it did in aspen. Our results highlight (1) the complexity of how differences in biomass allocation and changes in seedling size may alter storage and the response of species to drought, and (2) the importance of accounting for initial seedling characteristics (both morphological and physiological) when predicting seedling growth and the impacts of environmental stressors. |
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issn | 1999-4907 |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-03-11T05:01:41Z |
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publisher | MDPI AG |
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series | Forests |
spelling | doaj.art-fbae4f06b670441ca74037df697bae392023-11-17T19:18:02ZengMDPI AGForests1999-49072023-04-0114479610.3390/f14040796The Importance of Initial Seedling Characteristics in Controlling Allocation to Growth and Reserves under Different Soil Moisture ConditionsSimon M. Landhäusser0Erin T. Wiley1Kevin A. Solarik2Shaun P. Kulbaba3Alexander E. Goeppel4Department of Renewable Resources, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2H1, CanadaDepartment of Biology, University of Central Arkansas, Conway, AR 72035, USANational Council for Air and Stream Improvement, Inc. (NCASI), 2000 McGill College Avenue, Montreal, QC H3A 3H3, CanadaDepartment of Renewable Resources, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2H1, CanadaDepartment of Renewable Resources, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2H1, CanadaAfter disturbance, forest regeneration and resiliency depend on the ability of seedlings to respond, survive, and grow under a variety of stress conditions, including drought. Despite recent efforts to improve our fundamental knowledge surrounding plant response mechanisms to stress and their application in seedling quality research, initial seedling characteristics are often ignored when exploring seedling responses to stress in field plantings or ecophysiological studies. Here, we explore how initial differences in size, biomass allocation, and non-structural carbohydrate (NSC) storage affect the subsequent partitioning of new biomass, growth potential, and drought response in seedlings of a deciduous broad-leaved (<i>Populus tremuloides</i>) and an evergreen coniferous species (<i>Pinus banksiana</i>). We exposed seedlings of both species to different growing conditions in their first growing season in order to manipulate the aforementioned seedling characteristics. In a second growing season, we exposed these different seedling types to a subsequent drought stress. While drought reduced both structural growth and NSC storage in all seedling types, the expected shift in allocation favoring roots was only observed in seedling types with initially low root:shoot or root:stem ratios. Overall, we also found that the traits associated with greater growth were quite different between pine and aspen. While larger seedlings led to greater growth in pine, it was the smallest seedling type in aspen with the largest root:stem ratio that produced the most new growth. In aspen, this smaller seedling type was the only one that did not undergo a shift in biomass relative to its initial allometry, suggesting that adjustments in biomass allocation made by other, larger seedling types must have come at the cost of lower growth. In contrast, adjustments in allocation did not appear to negatively impact pine, possibly because reduced root:shoot ratios of larger seedlings did not reduce NSC storage, as it did in aspen. Our results highlight (1) the complexity of how differences in biomass allocation and changes in seedling size may alter storage and the response of species to drought, and (2) the importance of accounting for initial seedling characteristics (both morphological and physiological) when predicting seedling growth and the impacts of environmental stressors.https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/14/4/796biomassallocationreservedroughtconditioningstructural and non-structural carbohydrates |
spellingShingle | Simon M. Landhäusser Erin T. Wiley Kevin A. Solarik Shaun P. Kulbaba Alexander E. Goeppel The Importance of Initial Seedling Characteristics in Controlling Allocation to Growth and Reserves under Different Soil Moisture Conditions Forests biomass allocation reserve drought conditioning structural and non-structural carbohydrates |
title | The Importance of Initial Seedling Characteristics in Controlling Allocation to Growth and Reserves under Different Soil Moisture Conditions |
title_full | The Importance of Initial Seedling Characteristics in Controlling Allocation to Growth and Reserves under Different Soil Moisture Conditions |
title_fullStr | The Importance of Initial Seedling Characteristics in Controlling Allocation to Growth and Reserves under Different Soil Moisture Conditions |
title_full_unstemmed | The Importance of Initial Seedling Characteristics in Controlling Allocation to Growth and Reserves under Different Soil Moisture Conditions |
title_short | The Importance of Initial Seedling Characteristics in Controlling Allocation to Growth and Reserves under Different Soil Moisture Conditions |
title_sort | importance of initial seedling characteristics in controlling allocation to growth and reserves under different soil moisture conditions |
topic | biomass allocation reserve drought conditioning structural and non-structural carbohydrates |
url | https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/14/4/796 |
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