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Dec022023

Habitat fragmentation decouples fire-stimulated flowering from plant reproductive fitness

"Habitat fragmentation decouples fire-stimulated flowering from plant reproductive fitness"

This open access article was published September 18, 2023, in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Access the article via the permanent web address (DOI). (https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2306967120) 

Abstract

Many plant species in historically fire-dependent ecosystems exhibit fire-stimulated flowering. While greater reproductive effort after fire is expected to result in increased reproductive outcomes, seed production often depends on pollination, the spatial distribution of prospective mates, and the timing of their reproductive activity. Fire-stimulated flowering may thus have limited fitness benefits in small, isolated populations where mating opportunities are restricted and pollination rates are low. We conducted a 6-y study of 6,357 Echinacea angustifolia (Asteraceae) individuals across 35 remnant prairies in Minnesota (USA) to experimentally evaluate how fire effects on multiple components of reproduction vary with population size in a common species. Fire increased annual reproductive effort across populations, doubling the proportion of plants in flower and increasing the number of flower heads 65% per plant. In contrast, fire’s influence on reproductive outcomes differed between large and small populations, reflecting the density-dependent effects of fire on spatiotemporal mating potential and pollination. In populations with fewer than 20 individuals, fire did not consistently increase pollination or annual seed production. Above this threshold, fire increased mating potential, leading to a 24% increase in seed set and a 71% increase in annual seed production. Our findings suggest that density-dependent effects of fire on pollination largely determine plant reproductive outcomes and could influence population dynamics across fire-dependent systems. Failure to account for the density-dependent effects of fire on seed production may lead us to overestimate the beneficial effects of fire on plant demography and the capacity of fire to maintain plant diversity, especially in fragmented habitats.

Keywords: Prairie; fire; allee effect; phenology; density difference

Citation

Beck, Jared, Amy Waananen, and Stuart Wagenius. "Habitat fragmentation decouples fire-stimulated flowering from plant reproductive fitness." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 120, no. 39 (2023): e2306967120.

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