Juvenile survival increases with dispersal distance and varies across years: 15 years of evidence in a prairie perennial

Author:

Richardson Lea K.123ORCID,Nordstrom Scott W.4ORCID,Waananen Amy5ORCID,Thoen Riley D.6,Dykstra Amy B.7,Kiefer Gretel2,Mullett Drake E.12ORCID,Eichenberger Erin G.8,Shaw Ruth G.5,Wagenius Stuart2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Program in Plant Biology and Conservation Northwestern University Evanston Illinois USA

2. Negaunee Institute for Plant Conservation Science and Action Chicago Botanic Garden Glencoe Illinois USA

3. Department of Biology California State University Northridge Northridge California USA

4. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Colorado, Boulder Boulder Colorado USA

5. University of Minnesota Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior St. Paul Minnesota USA

6. Department of Plant Biology University of Georgia Athens Georgia USA

7. Department of Biological Sciences Bethel University St. Paul Minnesota USA

8. Department of Applied Ecology North Carolina State University Raleigh North Carolina USA

Abstract

AbstractJuvenile survival is critical to population persistence and evolutionary change. However, the survival of juvenile plants from emergence to reproductive maturity is rarely quantified. This is especially true for long‐lived perennials with extended pre‐reproductive periods. Furthermore, studies rarely have the replication necessary to account for variation among populations and cohorts. We estimated juvenile survival and its relationship to population size, density of conspecifics, distance to the maternal plant, age, year, and cohort for Echinacea angustifolia, a long‐lived herbaceous perennial. In 14 remnant prairie populations over seven sampling years, 2007–2013, we identified 886 seedlings. We then monitored these individuals annually until 2021 (8–15 years). Overall, juvenile mortality was very high; for almost all cohorts fewer than 10% of seedlings survived to age 8 or to year 2021. Only two of the seedlings reached reproductive maturity within the study period. Juvenile survival increased with distance from the maternal plant and varied more among the study years than it did by age or cohort. Juvenile survival did not vary with population size or local density of conspecific neighbors. Our results suggest that low juvenile survival could contribute to projected population declines.

Funder

Division of Environmental Biology

Publisher

Wiley

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