Dormancy-defense syndromes and tradeoffs between physical and chemical defenses in seeds of pioneer species
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Zalamea_et_al-2018-Ecology.pdf
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Final Published version
Author
Zalamea, Paul-CamiloDalling, James W.
Sarmiento, Carolina
Arnold, A. Elizabeth
Delevich, Carolyn
Berhow, Mark A.
Ndobegang, Anyangatia
Gripenberg, Sofia
Davis, Adam S.
Affiliation
Univ Arizona, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary BiolIssue Date
2018-09Keywords
Barro Colorado Islanddormancy types
lowland tropical forests
pioneer trees
plant defense theory
seed defenses
seed persistence
soil seed bank
Metadata
Show full item recordPublisher
WILEYCitation
Zalamea, P. , Dalling, J. W., Sarmiento, C. , Arnold, A. E., Delevich, C. , Berhow, M. A., Ndobegang, A. , Gripenberg, S. and Davis, A. S. (2018), Dormancy‐defense syndromes and tradeoffs between physical and chemical defenses in seeds of pioneer species. Ecology, 99: 1988-1998. doi:10.1002/ecy.2419Journal
ECOLOGYRights
© 2018 by the Ecological Society of America.Collection Information
This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.Abstract
Seeds of tropical pioneer trees have chemical and physical characteristics that determine their capacity to persist in the soil seed bank. These traits allow seeds to survive in the soil despite diverse predators and pathogens, and to germinate and recruit even decades after dispersal. Defenses in seedlings and adult plants often are described in terms of tradeoffs between chemical and physical defense, but the interplay of defensive strategies has been evaluated only rarely for seeds. Here we evaluated whether classes of seed defenses were negatively correlated across species (consistent with tradeoffs in defense strategies), or whether groups of traits formed associations across species (consistent with seed defense syndromes). Using 16 of the most common pioneer tree species in a neotropical lowland forest in Panama we investigated relationships among four physical traits (seed fracture resistance, seed coat thickness, seed permeability, and seed mass) and two chemical traits (number of phenolic compounds and phenolic peak area), and their association with seed persistence. In addition, seed toxicity was assessed with bioassays in which we evaluated the activity of seed extracts against representative fungal pathogens and a model invertebrate. We did not find univariate tradeoffs between chemical and physical defenses. Instead, we found that seed permeability a trait that distinguishes physical dormancy from other dormancy types was positively associated with chemical defense traits and negatively associated with physical defense traits. Using a linear discriminant analysis and a hierarchical cluster analysis we found evidence to distinguish three distinct seed defense syndromes that correspond directly with seed dormancy classes (i.e., quiescent, physical, and physiological). Our data suggest that short and long-term persistence of seeds can be achieved via two strategies: having permeable seeds that are well defended chemically, corresponding to the physiologically dormant defense syndrome; or having impermeable seeds that are well defended physically, corresponding to the physically dormant defense syndrome. In turn, transient seeds appear to have a lower degree of chemical and physical defenses, corresponding to the quiescent defense syndrome. Overall, we find that seed defense and seed dormancy are linked, suggesting that environmental pressures on seed persistence and for delayed germination can select for trait combinations defining distinct dormancy-defense syndromes.ISSN
0012-96581939-9170
PubMed ID
30074614DOI
10.1002/ecy.2419Version
Final published versionSponsors
NSF [DEB-1120205, DEB-1119758]; Simons Foundation [429440]Additional Links
https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ecy.2419ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1002/ecy.2419
