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Department of Integrative Biology, 3060 VLSB, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-3140 USA
Received for publication February 15, 2000. Accepted for publication June 20, 2000.
| ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: cloud forest Cyathea Cyatheaceae generalist habitat specialist succession tree fern
| INTRODUCTION |
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In this paper I ask how plant performance, as reflected in stem growth rate, rate of leaf production, leaf longevity, and rate of spore production, varies with successional habitat. These data more completely describe the life history of Cyathea caracasana and provide the basis for hypotheses on the evolution of this life history.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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25 m composed of relatively few tree species. The most common canopy trees include Alchornea (Euphorbiaceae), Clusia (Guttiferae), Inga (Fabaceae), Miconia (Melastomataceae), Myrica and Psidium (Myrtaceae), and Otoba (Myristicaceae). The majority of the reserve's 3200 ha is covered with primary forest, which has been little disturbed by human activity. These forests occur on both level ground in the floor of the volcanic caldera, for which the reserve is named, and on the steep slopes of the volcano's flanks. Within the primary forest, canopy gaps are an important component of the habitat dynamic. In a typical year,
3% of mature forest is under gaps, yielding an average forest turnover rate of 74 yr (Samper K., 1992
Data gathering
In November 1993, I initiated a long-term monitoring study of growth and performance of 20 individuals of Cyathea caracasana in each of three habitat types. (1) Open habitat consisted of recently abandoned pasture in which woody angiosperms were absent or present only as seedlings. In this open habitat, tree ferns formed the canopy and received full sun. (2) Secondary forest
15 yr into regeneration was characterized by a dense, nearly monotypic stand of Miconia, with a canopy between 3 and 4 m in height. I refer to this as low-canopy forest. (3) Secondary forest
30 yr into regeneration from pasture was characterized by a more open understory beneath a canopy of
1015 m; dominant trees included Inga, Myrica, and Otoba. This is referred to as high-canopy forest. Twenty individuals within each habitat type were located within a 1-ha area so that they might reasonably be assumed to be experiencing similar environmental conditions (e.g., soil type, moisture, slope, aspect). No information on the age of individual ferns was available, however all were 2 m in height or less at the beginning of the study. Plants were monitored monthly for 33 mo. Cyathea caracasana also occurs in mature, undisturbed cloud forest at La Planada. I did not include mature forest ferns in this study because individuals are widely separated in the forest, making sampling difficult and control for soil, slope and aspect impossible.
At each monthly visit, new, fully expanded leaves were marked with a dated tag; senesced leaves (>50% brown) were noted, and their tags removed and dated. This allowed calculation of rates of leaf production, leaf senescence, and leaf life span. At each monthly visit, fertile leaves were also noted, permitting the calculation of spore production rates and the documentation of annual patterns. At 6-mo intervals trunk height was measured from the apical meristem to ground level, and the total number of leaves was noted. These data allowed me to calculate stem growth rate and double-check the accounting of new and senesced leaves. No mortality was observed among study individuals during the 33 mo of observation.
Manipulations and statistical analyses, detailed in results, were performed in Microsoft Excel 5.0a and SYSTAT 5.2 (Wilkinson, 1989
) for Macintosh.
| RESULTS |
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30 cm/yr in C. caracasana was somewhat lower than that observed for Cyathea hornei (Baker) Copel. in Fiji (Ash, 1987
t for a two-sample t test assuming unequal variances), while both differed significantly from the high-canopy forest (P < 0.001). However, the variance observed in the low-canopy forest was significantly greater (F test for equality of variance, P < 0.001) than that seen in either the high-canopy forest or open habitat, which had statistically indistinguishable variance (F test for equality of variance, P = 0.4).
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Leaf production
The average fern in open habitat produced a total of 21.3 new leaves during the course of the study (Fig. 5). Ferns in the understory of the high-canopy forest produced an average of 7.7 new leaves during the study, while the average fern in the low-canopy forest produced 14 new leaves. As with growth rate, there was a significant difference in rate of leaf production between open habitat and both closed-canopy forests (P < 0.001). High- and low-canopy forests also differed in leaf production rate (P = 0.001). However, as with growth rate, the low-canopy forest displayed greater variances due to the two strategies present there. Ferns in the low-canopy forest that placed their fronds in the canopy also showed leaf production rates indistinguishable from those of open-habitat individuals (P = 0.18), while fully understory individuals in the low-canopy forest resembled those in the understory of the high-canopy forest (P = 0.93).
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Spore production
This study did not evaluate either gametophyte establishment or sporophyte recruitment. Instead, I estimated reproductive potential by the rates of spore production (proportion of fertile plants per month in each habitat) across habitats. Figure 8 shows the percentage of ferns with at least one fertile leaf during each month of the study. The most striking result here is that only one individual (in February 1995) in the high-canopy forest produced spores during the 33 mo of observation. In contrast, an average 23% of plants in open habitat produced spores in an average month, with rates of 60% or greater in some months. In the low- canopy forest, significantly fewer (average 9%, P = 0.002) plants produced spores. As with growth and leaf production rate, there is a significant difference in spore production rate between plants in the low-canopy forest that place their blades in the canopy (an average of 12% fertile per month) and those living entirely in the understory (2% fertility; P < 0.001).
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| DISCUSSION |
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My data show that Cyathea caracasana grows most rapidly, produces more leaves of shorter life span, and generates spores almost exclusively under conditions of full sun. In the Andes, this preferred sunny habitat may be found in human-altered environments such as abandoned pastures and roadsides. In natural mid-elevation forests, sunny habitats are characteristic of forest gaps. Individual plants may also track their preferred sunny habitat by producing long stipes, which place their fronds in a low canopy (Arens and Sánchez Baracaldo, 2000)
. When that strategy is no longer effective, growth and leaf production slow, and spore production ceases. Cyathea caracasana also does not recruit young sporophytes under a closed canopy at La Planada (Arens and Sánchez Baracaldo, 1998
). These results parallel those of Ortega (1984)
who reported that Sphaeropteris senilis (Klotzsch) R.M. Tryon [= Cyathea senilis (Klotzsch) Domin] had lower growth rates and no recruitment under closed canopy conditions in a Venezuelan cloud forest.
Together, these observations suggest a life history in which Cyathea caracasana adults produce spores and establish young sporophytes exclusively in sunny environments. When individuals begin to experience understory shade that they cannot escape through stipe elongation, they enter a "persistence mode" characterized by low growth rates, low leaf production rates, and longer lived leaves. Reproduction by spores is also curtailed. Ferns appear to be able to remain in persistence mode for relatively long periods. The high-canopy ferns in this study, for example, have probably persisted in the understory for >20 yr with no apparent mortality. (Because tree fern trunks resist decay, dead individuals are easy to locate in the forest.) Persistence mode may be triggered by a carbon shortage in the deep shade of the understory. In the absence of human disturbance, ferns remain in this persistence mode until a gap opens above them and they may begin another cycle of rapid growth, spore production, and recruitment. If a gap fails to open, however, plants may eventually die in the understory. Since C. caracasana is uncommon in the mature forest at La Planada, it seems likely that many individuals do die in the understory.
During the 33 mo of this study, I did not observe the opening of a canopy gap over understory individuals and so cannot directly document the increase in growth rate predicted to follow the change in light environment. In a location where long- term experimental manipulations would be possible, this portion of the life history hypothesis would be easy to test. However, anecdotal evidence from the mature forest at La Planada supports the role of gaps in the demographic dynamic of Cyathea caracasana. Cyathea caracasana is uncommon in mature forest; where it occurs, plants grow in clusters of four to ten individuals in two to four height classes (Arens and Sánchez Baracaldo, 1998
). Differing height classes within such clusters may represent cycles of recruitment during successive episodes of gap formation at that site. Without a way to age individual tree ferns independent of trunk height and leaf production, this interpretation remains provisional. However, if this interpretation of height cohorts in the mature forest is correct, it suggests that C. caracasana experiences cycles of growth and reproduction in the mature forest. Because the species grows well, produces spores, and recruits young sporophytes only under sunny conditions, it seems reasonable to infer that such cycles of growth and reproduction in mature forest individuals would be associated with gap formation.
This life history strategy appears to parallel the cycles of understory suppression and gap release described for some slow-growing temperate trees (Oliver and Stephens, 1977
). For these woody angiosperms, several cycles of suppression and release eventually allow individuals to reach the full sun of the canopy, the environment in which they reproduce. In contrast, tree ferns in the mid-elevation forest seldom reach the canopy under natural conditions and so are not using the gap cycle to reach their preferred sunny habitat. Instead, they may rely on the temporal distribution of gaps in space to maintain small natural populations. Such a life history relies on gaps opening above a given individual before it succumbs to light starvation in the understory. Therefore, this strategy would be effective only in those forests, like La Planada, with high canopy turnover rates. It is important to note, however, that we currently have no data on the length of time Cyathea caracasana individuals can persist in the understory, although individuals in the high-canopy secondary forest in this study have lived in subcanopy shade for at least 20 yr.
Cyathea caracasana is a member of the Neotropical Cyathea divergens clade (Fig. 9; Conant et al., 1995, 1996
). Basal members of this clade, Cyathea furfuracea Baker and Trichipteris pauciflora (Kuhn) R.M. Tryon [= Cyathea pauciflora (Kuhn) Lellinger], are restricted to "elfin" forests in Puerto Rico (Proctor, 1989
), and Venezuela and Colombia (Barrington, 1978
) respectively. In these high-elevation forests, tree ferns are reported to be a component of the canopy because woody angiosperms tend to be stunted. Cyathea caracasana, C. divergens Kunze, C. fulva (M. Martens & Galeotti) Fée, and C. delgadii Sternb. are montane forest species (Tryon, 1976
). Although few details of their life history and distribution are known, all of these except C. delgadii are reported to thrive in open areas and are less common in deep shade. In Bolivia, C. delgadii is more common in undisturbed forest but may persist along roadsides or in degraded forest (M. Kessler, A.-V. Haller-Institut fuer Pflanzenwissenschaften, Gottingen, Germany, personal communication, 2000). This suggests that sunny, open, or canopy habitats are the ancestral preference of members of this clade. The phylogenetic pattern suggests that C. caracasana's understory tolerance is derived from a narrower preference for sunny, canopy habitats. This conclusion is speculative because few detailed studies describing the habitat breadth of tree ferns have been performed. However, if correct, this conclusion is counter to the often-invoked principle that species with narrow habitat preferences are thought to evolve from generalists, which have a broader range of environmental tolerance from which natural selection can hone more specific habitat preferences (Mayr, 1942
; Simpson, 1984
; Kelley and Farrell, 1998
).
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| FOOTNOTES |
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