@phdthesis{Lachmuth2011, author = {Lachmuth, Susanne}, title = {Towards a mechanistic understanding of how demography, genetic differentiation and environmental factors interact to generate the invasion dynamics of senecio inaequidens}, address = {Potsdam}, pages = {172 S.}, year = {2011}, language = {en} } @article{BurkartAlslebenLachmuthetal.2010, author = {Burkart, Michael and Alsleben, Katja and Lachmuth, Susanne and Schumacher, Juliane and Hofmann, Ralf and Jeltsch, Florian and Schurr, Frank Martin}, title = {Recruitment requirements of the rare and threatened Juncus atratus}, issn = {0367-2530}, doi = {10.1016/j.flora.2009.08.003}, year = {2010}, abstract = {The long-term persistence of populations and species depends on the successful recruitment of individuals. The generative recruitment of plants may be limited by a lack of suitable germination and establishment conditions. Establishment limitation may especially be caused by the competitive effect of surrounding dense vegetation, which is believed to restrict the recruitment success of many plant species to small open patches ('safe sites'). We conducted experiments to clarify the roles of germination and seedling establishment as limiting processes in the recruitment of Juncus atratus Krock., a rare and threatened herbaceous perennial river corridor plant in Central Europe. Light intensity had a positive effect on germination. However, some seedlings emerged even in total darkness and the germination rate at 1\% light intensity was more than half of that at 60\% light intensity. Seedling establishment in the field after 10 weeks was 30\% on bare ground, but it was close to zero in grassland. Establishment in the growth chamber after 8 weeks was close to 75\% for seedlings that germinated underwater, but only about 35\% for seedlings that germinated afloat. Furthermore, establishment decreased with flooding duration on bare ground, but increased with flooding duration in grassland. These data indicate that establishment, rather than germination, is a critical life stage in Central European populations off. atratus. They furthermore indicate that the competition of surrounding vegetation for water limits seedling establishment under field conditions without flooding, largely restricting establishment success to bare ground habitats. In contrast, grassland is more suitable for the recruitment off. atratus than bare ground under prolonged flooding. Grassland may facilitate the establishment off. atratus seedlings during long- lasting floods by supplying oxygen to the soil through aerenchyma. The shift from competition to facilitation in grassland occurred after 30 days of flooding, i.e. within the ontogeny of individual plants. The specific recruitment requirements off. arrows may be a main cause of its rarity in modern Central Europe. In order to prevent regional extinction off. atratus, we suggest maintaining or re-establishing natural hydrodynamics in the species' habitats.}, language = {en} }