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Forestry Advance Access originally published online on May 5, 2007
Forestry 2007 80(3):351-357; doi:10.1093/forestry/cpm009
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© Institute of Chartered Foresters, 2007. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Species-specific drought effects on flower and fruit production in a Mediterranean holm oak forest

Romà Ogaya* and Josep Peñuelas

Unitat d'Ecofisiologia, CSIC-CEAB-CREAF, CREAF (Centre de Recerca Ecològica i Aplicacions Forestals), Fac. Ciències, Edifici C, Universitat Autònoma de Bracelona, Bellaterra, E-08193 Barcelona, Spain

* Corresponding author. E-mail: r.ogaya{at}creaf.uab.cat


   Abstract

A holm oak forest was exposed to an experimental drought (reduction of 15 per cent soil moisture as predicted for this area for the next decades by General Circulation Models and ecophysiological models) during 7 years to elucidate the reproductive responses of the dominant species Quercus ilex L., Arbutus unedo L. and Phillyrea latifolia L. Soil moisture was partially reduced by plastic strips intercepting rainfall and by ditch exclusion of water runoff. During the period studied, meteorological conditions and soil moisture were continuously monitored, together with flower and fruit production in the three dominant species. In Q. ilex and A. unedo, flower and specially fruit production were strongly correlated with annual rainfall, but not in P. latifolia. The experimental drought reduced flower and fruit production in Q. ilex by 30 per cent and 45 per cent, respectively. Reductions in flower and fruit production were not significant in A. unedo and were not observed in P. latifolia. A decrease in production of reproductive structures and the different response of the species studied to a decrease in water availability could induce important changes in the competitive ability of the different species and in the long term in the community species composition and future distribution of these Mediterranean species.


Received 16 November 2006.
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