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Chronic leaf harvesting reduces reproductive success of a tropical dry forest palm in northern Mexico

Palm leaves represent one of the most important non-timber forest products in tropical and subtropical regions. Brahea aculeata is an endemic palm of northwest Mexico, whose leaves are intensively exploited for roof thatch and handcrafts. As part of a long-term defoliation experiment, we evaluated t...

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Autores principales: Lopez-Toledo, Leonel, Perez-Decelis, Angeles, Macedo-Santana, Franceli, Cuevas, Eduardo, Endress, Bryan A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6193635/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30335793
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0205178
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author Lopez-Toledo, Leonel
Perez-Decelis, Angeles
Macedo-Santana, Franceli
Cuevas, Eduardo
Endress, Bryan A.
author_facet Lopez-Toledo, Leonel
Perez-Decelis, Angeles
Macedo-Santana, Franceli
Cuevas, Eduardo
Endress, Bryan A.
author_sort Lopez-Toledo, Leonel
collection PubMed
description Palm leaves represent one of the most important non-timber forest products in tropical and subtropical regions. Brahea aculeata is an endemic palm of northwest Mexico, whose leaves are intensively exploited for roof thatch and handcrafts. As part of a long-term defoliation experiment, we evaluated the effects of different leaf harvest on foliar and reproductive traits of adults and attributes of their progeny. We conducted a six-year manipulative experiment and applied three harvesting treatments to adults: high harvest, low harvest and no harvest (control). We recorded leaf production and size, flower and fruit production, seed germination and seedling growth. We also explored trade-offs among foliar and reproductive traits. Harvested palms exhibited drastically reduced reproductive activity, producing fewer flowers and fruits (up to 80 and 90% fewer than unharvested palms). However, individuals in both harvest treatments had larger leaves and increased leaf production rates, compared to control palms. For harvested palms, we registered first a slight increase in leaf traits and a decline in reproductive attributes. These traits showed a gradual reduction and for six period attained very low proportional values compared to control palms (~0.10), however individuals in the harvested treatments maintained the greatest leaf lengths and leaf production rates. Seed germination and seedling growth rates of progeny from harvested palms were significantly lower than control palms, with seeds from the high harvest treatment having the lowest seed production and germination rates. Relationships among leaf (size/production) and reproductive traits (flower/fruit production) were positive during the fourth year, but showed negative relationships for the fifth year suggesting a trade-off between reproduction and growth functions. Leaf harvesting in B. aculeata seems to alter patterns of resource allocation away from reproduction as reflected in a decrease in the probability of reproduction, seed number, germination, and vigor, causing a strong decrease in the reproductive success of this species. Results showed that the consequences of long-term leaf harvest not only affect harvested individuals, but also the fitness and vigor of progeny. This type of long-term studies is essential to understand the population dynamics of non-timber forest products and helps inform sustainable harvesting programs considering intensity, frequencies and periods for recovery from defoliation. Also results may help to explain how intensive and non-planned management schemes may negatively affect vital rates and long-term dynamics of populations from non-timber forest products and other components of the ecosystem.
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spelling pubmed-61936352018-11-05 Chronic leaf harvesting reduces reproductive success of a tropical dry forest palm in northern Mexico Lopez-Toledo, Leonel Perez-Decelis, Angeles Macedo-Santana, Franceli Cuevas, Eduardo Endress, Bryan A. PLoS One Research Article Palm leaves represent one of the most important non-timber forest products in tropical and subtropical regions. Brahea aculeata is an endemic palm of northwest Mexico, whose leaves are intensively exploited for roof thatch and handcrafts. As part of a long-term defoliation experiment, we evaluated the effects of different leaf harvest on foliar and reproductive traits of adults and attributes of their progeny. We conducted a six-year manipulative experiment and applied three harvesting treatments to adults: high harvest, low harvest and no harvest (control). We recorded leaf production and size, flower and fruit production, seed germination and seedling growth. We also explored trade-offs among foliar and reproductive traits. Harvested palms exhibited drastically reduced reproductive activity, producing fewer flowers and fruits (up to 80 and 90% fewer than unharvested palms). However, individuals in both harvest treatments had larger leaves and increased leaf production rates, compared to control palms. For harvested palms, we registered first a slight increase in leaf traits and a decline in reproductive attributes. These traits showed a gradual reduction and for six period attained very low proportional values compared to control palms (~0.10), however individuals in the harvested treatments maintained the greatest leaf lengths and leaf production rates. Seed germination and seedling growth rates of progeny from harvested palms were significantly lower than control palms, with seeds from the high harvest treatment having the lowest seed production and germination rates. Relationships among leaf (size/production) and reproductive traits (flower/fruit production) were positive during the fourth year, but showed negative relationships for the fifth year suggesting a trade-off between reproduction and growth functions. Leaf harvesting in B. aculeata seems to alter patterns of resource allocation away from reproduction as reflected in a decrease in the probability of reproduction, seed number, germination, and vigor, causing a strong decrease in the reproductive success of this species. Results showed that the consequences of long-term leaf harvest not only affect harvested individuals, but also the fitness and vigor of progeny. This type of long-term studies is essential to understand the population dynamics of non-timber forest products and helps inform sustainable harvesting programs considering intensity, frequencies and periods for recovery from defoliation. Also results may help to explain how intensive and non-planned management schemes may negatively affect vital rates and long-term dynamics of populations from non-timber forest products and other components of the ecosystem. Public Library of Science 2018-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC6193635/ /pubmed/30335793 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0205178 Text en © 2018 Lopez-Toledo et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lopez-Toledo, Leonel
Perez-Decelis, Angeles
Macedo-Santana, Franceli
Cuevas, Eduardo
Endress, Bryan A.
Chronic leaf harvesting reduces reproductive success of a tropical dry forest palm in northern Mexico
title Chronic leaf harvesting reduces reproductive success of a tropical dry forest palm in northern Mexico
title_full Chronic leaf harvesting reduces reproductive success of a tropical dry forest palm in northern Mexico
title_fullStr Chronic leaf harvesting reduces reproductive success of a tropical dry forest palm in northern Mexico
title_full_unstemmed Chronic leaf harvesting reduces reproductive success of a tropical dry forest palm in northern Mexico
title_short Chronic leaf harvesting reduces reproductive success of a tropical dry forest palm in northern Mexico
title_sort chronic leaf harvesting reduces reproductive success of a tropical dry forest palm in northern mexico
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6193635/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30335793
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0205178
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