| Literature DB >> 30461065 |
Matthew A Albrecht1, Oyomoare L Osazuwa-Peters1,2, Joyce Maschinski3, Timothy J Bell4,5, Marlin L Bowles5, William E Brumback6, Janice Duquesnel7, Michael Kunz8, Jimmy Lange9, Kimberlie A McCue10, A Kathryn McEachern11, Sheila Murray12, Peggy Olwell13, Noel B Pavlovic14, Cheryl L Peterson15, Jennifer Possley9, John L Randall8, Samuel J Wright9.
Abstract
Reintroductions are important components of conservation and recovery programs for rare plant species, but their long-term success rates are poorly understood. Previous reviews of plant reintroductions focused on short-term (e.g., ≤3 years) survival and flowering of founder individuals rather than on benchmarks of intergenerational persistence, such as seedling recruitment. However, short-term metrics may obscure outcomes because the unique demographic properties of reintroductions, including small size and unstable stage structure, could create lags in population growth. We used time-to-event analysis on a database of unusually well-monitored and long-term (4-28 years) reintroductions of 27 rare plant species to test whether life-history traits and population characteristics of reintroductions create time-lagged responses in seedling recruitment (i.e., recruitment time lags [RTLs]), an important benchmark of success and indicator of persistence in reintroduced populations. Recruitment time lags were highly variable among reintroductions, ranging from <1 to 17 years after installation. Recruitment patterns matched predictions from life-history theory with short-lived species (fast species) exhibiting consistently shorter and less variable RTLs than long-lived species (slow species). Long RTLs occurred in long-lived herbs, especially in grasslands, whereas short RTLs occurred in short-lived subtropical woody plants and annual herbs. Across plant life histories, as reproductive adult abundance increased, RTLs decreased. Highly variable RTLs were observed in species with multiple reintroduction events, suggesting local processes are just as important as life-history strategy in determining reintroduction outcomes. Time lags in restoration outcomes highlight the need to scale success benchmarks in reintroduction monitoring programs with plant life-history strategies and the unique demographic properties of restored populations. Drawing conclusions on the long-term success of plant reintroduction programs is premature given that demographic processes in species with slow life-histories take decades to unfold.Keywords: análisis de supervivencia; dinámicas poblacionales; especies raras; life-history theory; population dynamics; rare species; reclutamiento de plántulas; recuperación de especies; reubicación; seedling recruitment; species recovery; survival analysis; teoría de historias de vida; translocation; 幼苗更新; 物种恢复; 物种迁移; 生存分析; 生活史理论; 种群动态; 稀有物种
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30461065 DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Conserv Biol ISSN: 0888-8892 Impact factor: 6.560