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Effect of reproductive modes and environmental heterogeneity in the population dynamics of a geographically widespread clonal desert cactus
Authors:María C. Mandujano  Jordan Golubov  Laura F. Huenneke
Affiliation:(1) Departamento de Ecología de la Biodiversidad, Instituto de Ecología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), Apartado Postal 70-275, 04510 México, D.F., Mexico;(2) Departamento El Hombre y su Ambiente—CBS, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-X, Calzada del Hueso 1100, Col. Villa Quietud, 04960 México, D.F., Mexico;(3) College of Engineering and Natural Sciences, Northern Arizona University, P.O. Box 5621, Flagstaff, AZ 86011-5621, USA
Abstract:The dynamics of plant populations in arid environments are largely affected by the unpredictable environmental conditions and are fine-tuned by biotic factors, such as modes of recruitment. A single species must cope with both spatial and temporal heterogeneity that trigger pulses of sexual and clonal establishment throughout its distributional range. We studied two populations of the clonal, purple prickly pear cactus, Opuntia macrocentra, in order to contrast the factors responsible for the population dynamics of a common, widely distributed species. The study sites were located in protected areas that correspond to extreme latitudinal locations for this species within the Chihuahuan Desert. We studied both populations for four consecutive years and determined the demographic consequences of environmental variability and the mode of reproduction using matrix population models, life table response experiments (LTREs), and loop and perturbation analyses. Although both populations seemed fairly stable (population growth rate, λ∼1), different demographic parameters and different life cycle routes were responsible for this stability in each population. In the southernmost population (MBR) LTRE and loop and elasticity analyses showed that stasis is the demographic process with the highest contributions to λ, followed by sexual reproduction, and clonal propagation contributed the least. The northern population (CR) had both higher elasticities and larger contributions of stasis, followed by clonal propagation and sexual recruitment. Loop analysis also showed that individuals in CR have more paths to complete a life cycle than those in MBR. As a consequence, each population differed in life history traits (e.g., size class structure, size at sexual maturity, and reproductive value). Numerical perturbation analyses showed a small effect of the seed bank on the λ of both populations, while the transition from seeds to seedlings had an important effect mainly in the northern population. Clonal propagation (higher survival and higher contributions to vital rates) seems to be more important for maintaining populations over long time periods than sexual reproduction.
Keywords:Cactaceae  Clonal growth  Demography  Life history traits  Loop analysis  LTRE analysis  Matrix models   Opuntia
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