Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-jwnkl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-12T21:23:15.213Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Phenological niches of coexisting serotinous plants in the Namib Desert

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

Antje Günster
Affiliation:
Desert Ecological Research Unit of Namibia, PO Box 1592, Swakopmund, Namibia

Abstract

Timing of germination and flowering under different environmental conditions was investigated in four coexisting serotinous desert plants: Blepharis grossa (annual herb), Geigeria data, Geigeria ornativa (facultative perennial herbs) and Petalidium setosum (perennial shrub). Germination patterns were similar under varying environmental conditions in the study species, except for P. setosum, which germinated later when conditions were less favourable. B. grossa always germinated early, G. alata and G. ornativa later, which could be explained by differences in their seed dispersal mode. Thus no obvious niche separation in timing of germination was indicated in the study species. Flowering periods varied between seasons rather than between species and no niche separation in flowering times existed between the study plants. This might indicate that either interspecific competition plays a minor role in a community of desert serotinous plants or that niche separation exists in other components of the plants' niche, such as seed dispersal, seedling establishment and/or microhabitat selection.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1994

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

LITERATURE CITED

Agami, M. 1987. The establishment, growth, phenology and longevity of two species of Helianthtmum in the Negev Desert Highlands, Israel. Oecologia 71:486490.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Agren, G. I. & Fagerström, T. 1980. Increased or decreased separation of flowering times? The joint effect of competition for space and pollination in plants. Oikos 35:161164.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beatley, J. C. 1974a. Effects of rainfall and temperature on the distribution and behaviour of Larrea tridentata (creosote bush) in the Mojave Desert of Nevada. Ecology 55:245261.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beatley, J. C. 1974b. Phonological events and their environmental triggers in the Mojave Desert ecosystems. Ecology 55:856863.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bond, W. J. 1985. Canopy-stored seed reserves (serotiny) in Cape Proteaceae. South African Journal of Botany 51:181186.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bond, W., Vlok, J. & Viviers, M. 1984. Variation in seedling recruitment of Cape Protaceae after fire. Journal of Ecology 72:209221.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradstock, R. A. & Myerscough, P. J. 1981. Fire effects on seed release and the emergence and establishment of seedlings in Banksia ericifolia L. f. Australian Journal of Botany 29:521531.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bremekamp, C. E. B. 1926. On the opening mechanism of the Acanthaceous fruit. South African Journal of Science 23:488491.Google Scholar
Bykov, B. A. 1974. Fluctuations in the semidesert and desert vegetation of the Turanian plain. In Knapp, R. (ed.). Vegetation dynamics, Handbook of Vegetation Science, Vol. 8, Junk, The Hague.Google Scholar
Chesson, P. L. & Case, T. J. 1986. Overview: Nonequilibrium community theories: chance, variability, history and coexistence. Pp. 229239 in Diamond, J. & Case, T. J. (eds). Community ecology. Harper & Row, New York.Google Scholar
Clark, D. D. & Burk, J. H. 1980. Resource allocation patterns of two California-Sonoran desert ephemerals. Oecologia 46:8691.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cloudsley-Thompson, J. L. & Chadwick, M. J. 1964. Life in deserts. Dufour Editions, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Cowling, R. M. & Lamont, B. B. 1985. Seed release in Banksia: The role of wet-dry cycles. Australian Journal of Ecology 10:169171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dickinson, C. E. & Dodd, J. L. 1976. Phenological pattern in the short grass prairie. American Midland Naturalist 96:367378.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elberse, W. T. & Breman, H. 1989. Germination and establishment of Sahelian rangeland species. I. Seed properties. Oecologia 80:477484.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Elberse, W. T. & Breman, H. 1990. Germination and establishment of Sahelian rangeland species. II. Effects of water availability. Oecologia 85:3240.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Evenari, M. 1963. Zur Keimungsphysiologie zweier Wüstenpflanzen. Mitteilungcn Floristisch-soziologische Arbeitsgemtinschafl N.F. 10:7081.Google Scholar
Evenari, M. 1980. The history of germination research and the lesson it contains for today. Israel Journal of Botany 29:421.Google Scholar
Evenari, M. 1984. Seed physiology: from ovule to maturing seed. Botanical Review 50:143170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evenari, M., Shanan, L. & Tadmor, N. 1982. The Negev – The challenge of a desert. Harvard University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fenner, M. 1987. Seedlings. New Phytologist 106:3547.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fowler, N. L. 1988. What is a safe site?: Neighbour, litter, germination date, and patch effects. Ecology 69:947961.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fox, G. A. 1989. Consequences of flowering-time variation in a desert annual: adaptation and history. Ecology 70:12941305.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedman, J., Gundermann, N. & Ellis, N. 1978. Water response of the hygrochastic skeletons of the true Rose of Jericho. Oecologia 32:298301.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
GEOLOGICAL SURVEY 1980. Geological map of South West Africa/Namibia. Geological Survey, Windhoek.Google Scholar
Grime, J. P. 1989. Seed banks in ecological perspective. Pp. 1522 in Leek, M. A., Parker, V. T. & Simpson, R. L. (eds). Ecology of soil seed banks, Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Grubb, P. J. 1977. The maintenance of species-richness in plant communities: the importance of the regeneration niche. Biological Review 82:107145.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Günster, A. 1992. Aerial seed banks of the central Namib: Distribution of serotinous species in relation to climate and habitat. Journal of Biogeography 19:563572.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Günster, A. 1993a. Ökologische Untersuchungen zur zeitverzögerten Samenverbreitung in der zentralen Namib. Doctoral Thesis, University Münster, Germany.Google Scholar
Günster, A. 1993b. Microhabitat differentiation among serotinous plants in the Namib Desert. Journal of Vegetation Science 4:585590.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Günster, A. 1993c. Does the timing of rainfall events affect resource allocation in serotinous desert plants? Acta Oecologica 8:153159.Google Scholar
Gurevitch, J. 1986. Competition and the local distribution of the grass Stipa neomexicana. Ecology 67:4657.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gutterman, Y. 1982. Survival mechanisms of desert winter annual plants in the Negev Highlands of Israel. Scientific Review on Arid Zone Research Vol. 1:249283.Google Scholar
Gutterman, Y. 1990. Do germination mechanisms differ in plants originating in deserts receiving winter or summer rain? Israel Journal of Botany 39:355372.Google Scholar
Hardin, G. 1960. The competitive exclusion principle. Science 131:12921295.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Halverson, W. L. & Patten, D. T. 1975. Productivity and flowering of winter ephemerals in relation to Sonoran desert shrubs. American Midland Naturalist 93:311319.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunt, R. 1978. Plant growth analysis. Studies in Biology no. 96, Edward Arnold Publications, London.Google Scholar
Jurado, E. & Westoby, M. 1992. Germination biology of selected central Australian plants. Australian Journal of Ecology 17:341348.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kassas, M. 1966. Plant life in deserts. Pp. 145186 in Hills, E. (ed.). Arid lands: a geographical appraisal. Methuen, London.Google Scholar
Kemp, P. R. 1983. Phenological patterns of Chihuahuan desert plants in relation to the timing of water availability. Journal of Ecology 71:427436.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koller, D. 1972. Environmental control of seed germination. Pp. 1102 in Kozlewski, T. T. (ed.). Seed Biology, Vol. II. Academic Press, New York, London.Google Scholar
Lacey, E. P. 1986. Onset of reproduction in plants: size-versus age-dependency. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 1:7275.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lamont, B. B. 1991. Canopy seed storage – what's in a name? Oikos 60:266268.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lamont, B. B., Connell, S. W. & Bergl, S. M. 1991. Seed bank and population dynamics of Banksia cuneata: the role of time, fire and moisture. Botanical Gazette 152:114122.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lancaster, J., Lancaster, N. & Seely, M. K. 1984. Climate of the central Namib Desert. Madoqua 14:561.Google Scholar
Meyer, P. G. 1961. Vermischte Notizen zu den Acanthaceen und Euphorbiaceen Südwestafrikas. Mitteilungen Botanische Staatssammlung München IV:145160.Google Scholar
Monson, R. K., Littlejohn, R. O. & Williams, G. J. 1983. Photosynthetic adaptation to temperature in four species from the Colorado shortgrass steppe: a physiological model for coexistence. Oecologia 58:4351.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mott, J. J. 1979. Flowering, seed formation and dispersal. In Goodall, D. W. & Perry, P. A. (eds). Arid land ecosystems Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Mueller-Dombois, D. & Ellenberg, H. 1974. Aims and methods of vegetation ecology. John Wiley & Sons, New York.Google Scholar
Noy-Meir, I. 1973. Desert ecosystems: environment and producers. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 4:2551.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Noy-Meir, I. 1980. Review: structure and function of desert ecosystems. Israel Journal of Botany 28:119.Google Scholar
Ollerton, J. & Lack, A. J. 1992. Flowering phenology. An example of relaxation in populations evolved by chance? Trends in Ecology and Evolution 7:274276.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pianka, E. R. 1976. Competition and niche theory. Pp. 114141 in May, R. M. (ed.). Theoretical ecology: principles and applications. W. B. Saunders.Google Scholar
Rathcke, B. 1983. Competition and facilitation among plants for pollination. Pp. 305329 in Real, L. (ed.). Pollination biology. Academic Press Inc., Orlando, Florida.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sankary, M. N. & Barbour, M. G. 1972. Autecology of Haloxylon articulatum in Syria. Journal of Ecology 60:697712.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seely, M. K. & Louw, G. N. 1980. First approximation of the effects of rainfall on the ecology and energetics of a Namib Desert dune ecosystem. Journal of Arid Environments 3:2554.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shreve, F. 1942. The desert vegetation of North America. Botanical Review 8:195246.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Solbrig, O. T. & Orians, G. H. 1977. The adaptive characteristics of desert plants. American Scientist 65:412421.Google Scholar
Solbrig, O. T., Barbour, M. A., Cross, J., Goldstein, G., Lowe, C. H., Morello, J. & Yang, T. W. 1977. Pp. 67106 in Orians, G. H. & Solbrig, O. T. (eds). Convergent evolution in warm deserts. US/IBP Synthesis Series 3. Stroudsburg.Google Scholar
Sousa, W. R. 1984. The role of disturbance in natural communities. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 15:353391.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stopp, K. 1958. Die verbreitungshemmenden Einrichtungen der südafrikanischen Flora. Botanical Studies 8, Jena. 103 pp.Google Scholar
Walter, H. 1986. The Namib Desert. Pp. 245282 in Evenari, M., Noy-Meir, I. & Goodall, D. W. (eds). Ecosystems of the world. Vol. 12B, Elsevier, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Went, F. W. 1948. Ecology of desert plants. I. Observations on the germination in the Joshua Tree National Monument, California. Ecology 29:242253.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wiens, J. A. 1977. On competition and variable environments. American Scientist 65:590597.Google Scholar
Zedler, P. H. 1986. Closed-cone conifers of the chaparral. Fremontia 14:1417.Google Scholar
Zohary, M. 1962. Plant life of Palestine. Ronald Press Company, New York.Google Scholar