Sunfleck effects on physiology, growth, and local demography of American ginseng (Panax quinquefolius L.)

► When forest management practices aim to conserve species diversity, understory plants are key. ► American ginseng is typical of many understory plants but is also economically valuable. ► Ginseng responds positively to small canopy gaps in terms of growth, but negatively for germination. ► A spati...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inForest ecology and management Vol. 291; pp. 220 - 227
Main Authors Wagner, Alixandra, McGraw, James B.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Kidlington Elsevier B.V 01.03.2013
Elsevier
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Summary:► When forest management practices aim to conserve species diversity, understory plants are key. ► American ginseng is typical of many understory plants but is also economically valuable. ► Ginseng responds positively to small canopy gaps in terms of growth, but negatively for germination. ► A spatially and temporally varying light environment is beneficial for ginseng population growth. ► Management practices that provide such conditions will likely benefit understory plants. The light environment of the forest understory is heterogeneous, characterized by low levels of diffuse light punctuated by short periods of direct solar radiation known as sunflecks. Less well understood is the degree to which sunflecks are responsible for spatially varying performance of understory plants. We studied natural variation in the light environment, as well as physiology, growth, and microsite demographics of American ginseng (Panax quinquefolius L.) to test whether clustering of plants within a population was related to sunfleck variation. HOBO dataloggers were positioned in 10 clusters within a single ginseng population to measure the local understory light environment during mid-season (June 27 to August 9 2011). Photosynthesis and transpiration were measured with a Li-Cor 6400 portable photosynthesis system. Population census data were used to obtain measurements of the relative growth rate (2011–2012), seed production efficiency (2011) and seed germination (2009–2012) of plants in the same subpopulations. All measured dependent variables were regressed against the percentage of mean photosynthetic photon flux density contributed from sunflecks and mean length of the longest sunfleck. Light saturated photosynthetic rates of ginseng showed a positive linear relationship to both sunfleck characteristics, while transpiration was unaffected. The relative growth rate of established ginseng plants also had a positive linear relationship with the length of the longest sunfleck. However, germination rate was negatively affected by an increasing percentage of photosynthetic photon flux density from sunflecks. Seed production efficiency was not influenced by either sunfleck characteristic. Due to negative effects on germination, initial ginseng cluster formation is likely not associated with sunflecks, however photosynthetic and growth responses suggest that fitness effects are positive for established individuals. A spatially and temporally varying light environment is beneficial for ginseng population growth.
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ISSN:0378-1127
1872-7042
DOI:10.1016/j.foreco.2012.11.038