@article{GraaeVerheyenKolbetal.2009, author = {Graae, Bente Jessen and Verheyen, Kris and Kolb, Annette and van der Veken, Sebastian and Heinken, Thilo and Chabrerie, Olivier and Diekmann, Martin and Valtinat, Karin and Zindel, Renate and Karlsson, Elisabeth and Str{\"o}m, Lotta and Decocq, Guillaume and Hermy, Martin and Baskin, Carol C.}, title = {Germination requirements and seed mass of slow- and fast-colonizing temperate forest herbs along a latitudinal gradient}, issn = {1195-6860}, doi = {10.2980/16-2-3234}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Predictions on displacement of suitable habitats due to climate change suggest that plant species with poor colonization ability may be unable to move fast enough to match forecasted climate-induced changes in habitat distribution. However, studies on early Holocene plant migration show fast migration of many plant species that are poor colonizers today. We hypothesize that warmer temperatures during the early Holocene yielded higher seed quality, contributing to explaining the fast migration. We studied how the 3 seed quality variables, seed mass, germinability, and requirements for break of seed dormancy, vary for seeds of 11 forest herb species with varying colonization capacity collected along a 1400-km latitudinal gradient. Within species, seed mass showed a positive correlation with latitude, whereas germinability was more positively correlated with temperature (growing degree hours obtained at time of seed collection). Only slow-colonizing species increased germinability with temperature, whereas only fast-colonizing species increased germinability with latitude. These interactions were only detectable when analyzing germinability of the seeds, even though this trait and seed mass were correlated. The requirement for dormancy break did not correlate with latitude or temperature. The results indicate that seed development of slow colonizers may be favoured by a warmer climate, which in turn may be important for their migration capacity.}, language = {en} } @article{deFrenneKolbVerheyenetal.2009, author = {de Frenne, Pieter and Kolb, Annette and Verheyen, Kris and Brunet, Johanne and Chabrerie, Olivier and Decocq, Guillaume and Diekmann, Martin and Eriksson, Ove and Heinken, Thilo and Hermy, Martin and J{\~o}gar, {\"U}lle and Stanton, Sara and Quataert, Paul and Zindel, Renate and Zobel, Martin and Graae, Bente Jessen}, title = {Unravelling the effects of temperature, latitude and local environment on the reproduction of forest herbs}, issn = {1466-822X}, doi = {10.1111/j.1466-8238.2009.00487.x}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Aim To investigate the effect of temperature, latitude and local environment on the reproductive traits of widespread perennial forest herbs to better understand the potential impacts of rising temperatures on their population dynamics and colonization capacities. Location Six regions along a latitudinal gradient from France to Sweden. Methods Within each region, we collected data from three to five populations of up to six species. For each species, several variables were recorded in each region (temperature, latitude) and population (local abiotic and biotic environmental variables), and seed production and germination were estimated. Resource investment in reproduction (RIR) was quantified as seed number ¥ seed mass, while germinable seed output (GSO) was expressed as seed number ¥ germination percentage.We performed linear regression and mixed effect models to investigate the effects of temperature (growing degree hours), latitude and local abiotic and biotic environment on RIR and GSO. Results Temperature and latitude explained most of the variation in RIR and GSO for early flowering species with a northerly distribution range edge (Anemone nemorosa, Paris quadrifolia and Oxalis acetosella). Reproduction of the more southerly distributed species (Brachypodium sylvaticum, Circaea lutetiana and Primula elatior), in contrast, was independent of temperature/latitude. In the late summer species, B. sylvaticum and C. lutetiana, variation in RIR and GSO was best explained by local environmental variables, while none of the investigated variables appeared to be related to reproduction in P. elatior. Main conclusions We showed that reproduction of only two early flowering, northerly distributed species was related to temperature. This suggests that the potential reproductive response of forest herbs to climate warming partly depends on their phenology and distribution, but also that the response is to some extent species dependent. These findings should be taken into account when predictions about future shifts in distribution range are made.}, language = {en} }