Climate and species stress resistance modulate the higher survival of large seedlings in forest restorations worldwide
Author
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Andivia, Enrique
Author
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Villar Salvador, Pedro
Author
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Oliet, Juan A.
Author
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Puertolas, Jaime
Author
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Dumroese, R. Kasten
Author
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Ivetic, Vladan
Author
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Molina Venegas, Rafael
Author
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Arellano, Eduardo C.
Author
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Li, Guolei
Author
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Ovalle Ortega, Juan Francisco
Admission date
dc.date.accessioned
2022-01-10T21:08:22Z
Available date
dc.date.available
2022-01-10T21:08:22Z
Publication date
dc.date.issued
2021
Cita de ítem
dc.identifier.citation
Ecological Applications, 31(6), 2021, e02394
es_ES
Identifier
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10.1002/eap.2394
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/183632
Abstract
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Seedling planting plays a key role in active forest restoration and regeneration of
managed stands. Plant attributes at outplanting can determine tree seedling survival and consequently
early success of forest plantations. Although many studies show that large seedlings
of the same age within a species have higher survival than small ones, others report the opposite.
This may be due to differences in environmental conditions at the planting site and in the
inherent functional characteristics of species. Here, we conducted a global-scale meta-analysis
to evaluate the effect of seedling size on early outplanting survival. Our meta-analysis covered
86 tree species and 142 planting locations distributed worldwide. We also assessed whether
planting site aridity and key plant functional traits related to abiotic and biotic stress resistance
and growth capacity, namely specific leaf area and wood density, modulate this effect. Planting
large seedlings within a species consistently increases survival in forest plantations worldwide.
Species’ functional traits modulate the magnitude of the positive seedling size–outplanting survival
relationship, showing contrasting effects due to aridity and between angiosperms and
gymnosperms. For angiosperms planted in arid/semiarid sites and gymnosperms in subhumid/
humid sites the magnitude of the positive effect of seedling size on survival was maximized in
species with low specific leaf area and high wood density, characteristics linked to high stress
resistance and slow growth. By contrast, high specific leaf area and low wood density maximized
the positive effect of seedling size on survival for angiosperms planted in subhumid/humid
sites. Results have key implications for implementing forest plantations globally, especially
for adjusting nursery cultivation to species’ functional characteristics and planting site aridity.
Nursery cultivation should promote large seedlings, especially for stress sensitive angiosperms
planted in humid sites and for stress-resistant species planted in dry sites.
es_ES
Patrocinador
dc.description.sponsorship
REMEDINAL-TE S2018/EMT-4338
MICIN PID2019-106806GB-I00
SRO 451-02-68/2020/14/2000169
European Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST) CA19128PEN-CAFoRR
Universidad Complutense de Madrid CT39/17
Regional Government of Madrid, Spain, TALENTO fellowship 2018-T2/AMB-10332
ANID PIA/BASAL FB0002
691149
es_ES
Lenguage
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en
es_ES
Publisher
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Wiley
es_ES
Type of license
dc.rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States