Interactive effects of shade and irrigation on the performance of seedlings of three Mediterranean Quercus species

TitleInteractive effects of shade and irrigation on the performance of seedlings of three Mediterranean Quercus species
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2006
AuthorsCastro-Díez, P., Navarro J., Pintado A., Sancho L. G., & Maestro M.
JournalTree Physiology
Volume26
Pagination389-400
Accession Number16356909
KeywordsAgriculture, Agriculture: methods, Analysis of Variance, biomass allocation, carbon assimilation rate, fluorescence, Mediterranean Region, Phenology, Phenotype, Plant Leaves, Plant Leaves: growth & development, Plant Shoots, Plant Shoots: physiology, Quercus, Quercus: drug effects, Quercus: growth & development, Quercus: physiology, Relative growth rate, Seedling, Seedling: drug effects, Seedling: physiology, water, Water: metabolism, Water: pharmacology
Abstract

Shade and irrigation are frequently used to increase the success of Mediterranean Quercus spp. plantations. However, there is controversy about the combined effects of these treatments on plant performance. We assessed the effects of two irradiances (full sunlight and moderate shade) and two summer watering regimes (high (daily) and low (alternate days)) on leaf and whole-plant traits of 1-year-old seedlings of Quercus coccifera, Q. ilex subsp. ballota and Q. faginea grown outdoors for 8.5 months. Leaf traits included measures of morphology, nitrogen concentration, gas exchange and photochemical efficiency, and measures of whole-plant traits included biomass allocation patterns, growth phenology, across-summer leaf area change and relative growth rate (RGR).Moderate shade reduced leaf mass per area, increased photochemical efficiency, maximum carbon assimilation rate (Amax) and allocation to leaves, and prolonged the growing period in one or more of the species. Daily watering in summer increased Amax of Q. ilex and prolonged the growing period of Q. ilex and Q. faginea. Both treatments tended to increase RGR. The effect of shade was greater in the low-watering regime than in the high-watering regime for two of the 15 studied traits, with treatment effects being independent for the remaining 13 traits. Leaf nitrogen and the ability to maintain leaf area after the arid period, rather than biomass allocation traits, explained the variation in seedling RGR. Trait responsiveness to the treatments was low and similar among species and between study scales, being unexpectedly low in Q. faginea leaves. This may be because selective pressures on leaf plasticity act differently in deciduous and evergreen species. We conclude that moderate shade and daily summer watering enhance the performance of Mediterranean Quercus seedlings through species-specific mechanisms.