Abstract
The study of functional morphological traits enables us to know fundamental aspects of the dynamics of plant communities in local and global habitats. Regenerative morphological traits play an important role in defining plant history and ecological behavior. Seed and fruit characteristics determine to a large extent the patterns for dispersal, germination, establishment and seedling recruitment a given species exhibits on its natural habitat. Despite their prominent role, seed and fruit traits have been poorly studied at the community level of woody plant species in neo-tropical dry forests. In the present study we aimed at i) evaluate the functional role of morphological traits of seeds, fruits and embryo in woody plant species; ii) determine which are the morphological patterns present in seeds collected from the community of woody species that occur in neo-tropical dry forests; and iii) compare woody plant species seed mass values comparatively between neo-tropical dry and tropical forests. To do so, mature seeds were collected from 79 plant species that occur in the Tumbesian forest of Southwest Ecuador. The studied species included the 42 and 37 most representative tree and shrubbery species of the Tumbesian forest respectively. A total of 18 morphological traits (seven quantitative and 11 qualitative) were measured and evaluated in the seeds, fruits and embryos of the selected species, and we compared the seeds mass with other forest types. Our results showed a huge heterogeneity among traits values in the studied species. Seed mass, volume and number were the traits that vary the most at the community level, i.e. seed length ranged from 1.3 to 39 mm, and seed width from 0.6 to 25 mm. Only six embryo types were found among the 79 plant species. In 40 % of the cases, fully developed inverted embryos with large and thick cotyledons to store considerable amount of nutrients were recorded. We concluded that highly variable and functionally complementary morphological traits occur among the studied woody plants of the Tumbesian dry forest. The latter favors a plethora of behavioral mechanisms to coexist among woody species of the dry forest in response to the environmental stress that is typical of arid areas.
Highlights
El estudio de rasgos funcionales en las plantas se vuelve cada día más importante en la ecología de las comunidades (Kröber, Böhnke, Welk, Wirth, & Bruelheide, 2012)
Partiendo de la premisa que los rasgos regenerativos cumplen un rol fundamental en la ecología de las especies y que han sido poco o casi nada estudiados en zonas áridas (Metz et al, 2010), más aún, en los bosques secos tumbesinos, los objetivos de nuestro estudio fueron: a) explorar aspectos de la ecología de semillas a nivel de una comunidad de especies leñosas mediante la descripción y evaluación de rasgos morfológicos funcionales en frutos, semillas y embriones, b) determinar qué patrones morfológicos caracterizan a las semillas de especies leñosas distribuidas en uno de los remanentes de bosque seco más importantes de la región tumbesina, c) analizar la masa de la semillas con respecto a otros bosques tropicales
Existe gran variabilidad y heterogeneidad en los rasgos morfológicos de las semillas de especies leñosas del bosque seco, lo que les permitiría tener un amplio rango de mecanismos y comportamiento para soportar condiciones de estrés ambiental en zonas áridas
Summary
El estudio de rasgos funcionales en las plantas se vuelve cada día más importante en la ecología de las comunidades (Kröber, Böhnke, Welk, Wirth, & Bruelheide, 2012).
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.