2019
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2745.13308
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Climate teleconnections synchronizePicea glaucamasting and fire disturbance: Evidence for a fire‐related form of environmental prediction

Abstract: 1. Synchronous pulses of seed masting and natural disturbance have positive feedbacks on the reproduction of masting species in disturbance-prone ecosystems.We test the hypotheses that disturbances and proximate causes of masting are correlated, and that their large-scale synchrony is driven by similar climate teleconnection patterns at both inter-annual and decadal time scales.2. Hypotheses were tested on white spruce (Picea glauca), a masting species which surprisingly persists in fire-prone boreal forests w… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(60 citation statements)
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“…For reproductive response, it may consist of increased rates of production of seeds (i.e., fecundity), increased rates of germination of seeds (i.e., fertility) or faster growth of suppressed seedlings, etc. (Chambers, 1995 ; Jutila and Grace, 2002 ; Martini and Santos, 2007 ; Ascoli et al, 2019 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For reproductive response, it may consist of increased rates of production of seeds (i.e., fecundity), increased rates of germination of seeds (i.e., fertility) or faster growth of suppressed seedlings, etc. (Chambers, 1995 ; Jutila and Grace, 2002 ; Martini and Santos, 2007 ; Ascoli et al, 2019 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The exact mechanisms driving mast‐fruiting events are still poorly understood (Pearse, Koenig, & Kelly, ). Mast fruiting events in long‐lived tree species induced by climatically driven, abrupt changes in resource availability (e.g., drought, rain or fire events) have been reported by several authors (Ascoli et al, , ; Piovesan & Adams, ). Generally, in all of the above‐mentioned cases sporadic release from generally prevailing resource limitation induced by external stochastic climatic events or other sporadic disturbance pulses, and in some cases combined with internal, physiological drivers (for mast‐fruiting) seem to induce sporadic recruitment by causing temporal variations in demographic rates (Figure ).…”
Section: The Syndrome Of Long‐lived Sporadic Recruitersmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…For example, higher interannual variability leads to higher production of viable ( pollinated and undamaged) seeds during mast events, but comes at costs of missed reproductive opportunities in low-seeding years [54]. This is particularly important when successful recruitment depends on the coincidence of masting and environmental conditions for seedling establishment [55]. Modelling studies indicate that less frequent masting (higher interannual variability) can alter successional pathways after disturbance, when the recruitment window for late-successional species is short [56].…”
Section: Interannual Variationmentioning
confidence: 99%